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Experts gathered at an August 6 AEI conference to examine how Sudan fits into the war on terrorism.
An important test for reform of the United Nations will be measured by whether there is a dramatic change inhow Israel, the only functioning democracy in the Middle East, is treated.
With the passage of a new Criminal-Procedural Code and related statutory reforms in December 2001, the long trek toward a true Russian Rechtsstaat—a lawful state—has achieved another milestone.
U.S.-Sudanese relations are now at a watershed point.
While speculation about the foreign policy priorities of President Bush's second term is rife,the recentattack in Darfur should catapult the problem of Sudan to the top of the agenda.
The International Criminal Court lacks effective oversight, and there is a risk it will take actions that have unforeseen effects in difficult crisis situations.
U.S. policy toward Sudan is at a crossroads. Although the authoritarian regime in Khartoum remains on the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism, concern about its continued association with jihadists has been balanced by post-9/11 pledges of cooperation against al Qaeda. But with the world’s worst humanitarian crisis unfolding...



