Changes At Mead GHQ

Change is coming to the Mead world.  On June 30, I will be changing hats.  After more than 12 years at the Council on Foreign Relations, I will be stepping down as the Henry Kissinger fellow in US foreign policy to take up a full time position as the James Chace chair in political studies […]

Literary Saturday: The Napoleonic Wars

While browsing through the bookstores of Oxford last month (much as I love Amazon.com and my Kindle, no on-line bookstore has yet reproduced the experience of wandering through a great bookstore as random titles catch your eye), I ran across the kind of book I love: a big fat paperback narrative history.  It’s been a […]

Goo-Goo Genocidaires
The Blood Is Dripping From Their Hands

As the Security Council prepares to vote the next round of sanctions against Iran’s nuclear program, I’m thinking of some old debates about how to handle difficult regimes.  The thoughts aren’t consoling; too many voices in the debate over Iran hearken back to some of the worst ideas in American and European history.Of all the […]

Transitions

It’s been another heavy weekend of non-blogging commitments.  My parents have sold their home of the last thirty five years as they plan a move into a retirement center.  The closing and the move are taking place later this month, but the chaos has already hit.This past weekend there was a gathering of the clan; […]

Terrible Twins: Turkey, Brazil and the Future of American Foreign Policy

These days, there’s an unusual spectacle in world affairs.  The United States has relatively good relations with the major powers: China, the EU states, India and even Russia are all more or less working together.  But two middle powers, Turkey and Brazil, are not only asserting themselves more effectively than in the past; they have […]

Israel’s Strategic Failure

Outrage reigns as Israel writhes, impaled on the horns of the same old dilemma once again.It is an old and familiar story.  Pursuing its security in a hostile environment, Israel takes a risky and perhaps a radical step.  Something goes awry and people are killed.  Waves of international outrage flood the globe.  In the Arab […]

An American in Oxford

It’s been a slow week for blogging; I was attending a conference at Oxford on religion and foreign policy.  As always, I feel a little bit like Rip Van Winkle when I visit Britain.  I lived there for a year almost half a century ago and my relatively brief visits since haven’t effaced the impression […]

Slow Blogging

I’ve been at a conference in the UK the last week and between catching up with old friends at Oxford, listening to speeches and making a presentation myself, there hasn’t been much time for writing.  That should change now; I’m back in New York and as the jet lag fades I will be back on […]

Pentecost Power

Sometimes the stone that the builders rejected ends up as the cornerstone of the whole building.  That may not quite describe the role of Christianity in American foreign policy, but in some important and little understood ways the massive surge of Christian faith in the developing world is tilting the global playing field in America’s […]

Now That It’s Over, The Grey Lady Sings

In one of the most embarrassing news stories I’ve ever seen in the mainstream press, the New York Times has a comprehensive report on the catastrophic meltdown in the public’s interest in global warming.The only problem: nothing in here is news, if by news you mean ‘new’.“Climate Fears Turn To Doubts Among Britons,” blares the […]

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