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The world's response to Libya has made clear that currently fashionable arguments about the 'rise of the Rest' and the world's new 'nonpolarity' are simply untrue.
The image of the United States as imperial hyperpower isa myth thatmust be re-examinedif we want to buildan understanding of world power in a globalized era.
At AEI's Annual Dinner on February 10, political essayist Charles Krauthammer delivers a speech on U.S. foreign policy for the twenty-first century.
The Cold War's most successful arms control agreement is imperiling U.S. forces and increasing the probability of a conflict in Asia.
When it comes to the biggest issue of the day--the revolt of Middle East publics against their leaders--China has nothing to say.
That Bin Laden survived almost 10 years after his attacks on New York and Washington should be an indictment of both parties and, more broadly, the American way of diplomacy.
Be they social scientists or political pundits, academics and analysts are forever dividing history into epochs and eras that too often impart a false sense of clarity to the muddy course of human events. So it is with some modesty that we declare the United States and the world are on the verge of a "Third Atomic Age."
America is supposed to be on the decline, and China on the rise. But the truth is, American leadership is still the global norm.




