Essays
Dean Acheson and Global Warming

Over at the Arena on Politico.com they asked me to put in my two cents about the purloined emails from the global warming scientists.I did; this could unfortunately be one of the stories of the year. Read it below:When the ‘climategate’ story broke, I doubted that it would ultimately amount to much. Scientists are as […]

Et Tu, New York Times?

The signs are that President Obama is nearing an inflection point in foreign policy: a point where perceptions crystallize one way or the other.  Either he is a cool and calm genius, restoring order to an American foreign policy in crisis, or he is a well-intentioned bumbler, Jimmy Carter II.  Peggy Noonan, not surprisingly, makes […]

World Ending, Italy Muddling Through

As I sit here courtesy of the Aspen Institute Italy at the official Team Mead Remote Roman Blogging Facility at the Parco dei Principi hotel, I can see the dome of St. Peter’s from my balcony beyond the Borghese Gardens overlooking the Old City.  Nice work if you can get it, although after almost two […]

Happy Turkey Day

Not surprisingly for Thanksgiving Day, I’ve got Turkey on my mind.It’s not just me; Turkey could become a major issue in US-European relations.  I heard rumors in Berlin that President Obama surprised German Chancellor Angela Merkel by asking her why admitting Turkey into the EU is such a big deal for Germans.Mustafa Akyol has just […]

Fasten Your Seat Belts: Turbulence Ahead

My friend Steve Clemons has one of the most interesting blogs around; today I think he went off the rails with a post on a New York City $100 million stimulus project that has gone to a Chinese firm.  Even when he’s wrong, Steve is interesting.  This time, he’s very wrong — and wrong in […]

Ich Bin Ein Hamburger

I’m finishing up a quick visit to Germany after the Turkey trip.  I stopped off in Hamburg to see Joe Joffe, another member of TAI’s editorial board, and met a group of his colleagues at Die Zeit.The short take: Obama remains very popular in Germany, but people are less sure about America.  The question here […]

The Truth Is Like An Atom Bomb

Mars Bluff is a small town outside Florence, South Carolina, the town where all four of my grandparents lived for many years.  About fifty years ago it had its 15 minutes of fame when an atomic bomb fell out of an Air Force plane and exploded near the home of one Walter Gregg, injuring some […]

Amateur Diplomat Urges Congress to Just Say No to the Armenian Genocide Resolution

My recent trip to Turkey was an adventure in public diplomacy; I was in the country at the request of the State Department.  US diplomats abroad invite a variety of Americans to appear before foreign audiences for anything from jazz concerts and poetry readings to scientific presentations and talks on current events.  Wisely, the embassy […]

The Pope and the Archbishop

The Archbishop of Canterbury and the Pope met in Rome this week and their spokesmen issued statements with the usual platitudes.  One thing they could do to benefit mankind: agree to a joint crackdown on appalling liturgical wear like the ones at Christopher Johnson’s website Bad Vestments. (Thanks to Glenn Reynolds the renowned Instapundit for […]

Northern Ireland and Palestine

The BBC is carrying a story today about a 400 pound bomb left at a police station in Northern Ireland, apparently by ‘dissident’ members of the IRA.  On the same night, there was a gun battle between the dissidents and the police. Fortunately the bomb only partially exploded and the damage was limited.This is bad […]

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