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Everyone knows presidents have larger-than-life size egos. It goes with the job. But changes on the official White House website reveal that we've never had a self-regarding narcissist quite like the oval Office's current occupant.
Should the United States pursue a counterterrorism or counterinsurgency strategy in Afghanistan?
Wednesday and Thursday mark Egypt’s first post-Mubarak presidential elections. Sadly, what should be a purple-fingered moment brings some hope and much disappointment. Don’t get me wrong – Mubarak was a loathsome stooge, a petty and incompetent rentier tyrant who deserved what he got and more.
Our national security would be better served if the United States captured al-Asiri and kept him alive for questioning, so we can find out what he knows.
When an imperious bully like Fidel Castro starts to fear, his instinct is to try to sow fear among his enemies. Today, with his student and benefactor, Venezuelan leader Hugo Chávez, dying of cancer, what the Cuban dictator fears most is that his bankrupt regime in Havana is about to lose billions in critical aid and oil.
No one knows whether there will be a 2012 farm bill, but we do know that it there is one, nutrition programs -- food stamps, school lunches, WIC, etc. -- will take up the lion’s share of farm bill funding, well in excess of $90 billion a year. But is the funding serving the neediest Americans? Find out on Thursday at AEI.
Most British Muslims, like most Iraqis, want peace and freedom. Those who believe that they are delivering those things need to be as robust in their arguments as Osama's useful idiots are in theirs.
As China grows less predictable and the United States less willing to shoulder its responsibilities, familiar patterns of bilateral relations must change.







