Roll On, Columbia

The world is still arguing about what was or what was not accomplished at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington this week. But one thing should be clear: for better or for worse, the United States remains the world’s leading power.  The American century has not come to an end.This was supposed to be the […]

Apples of Discord

As the 47 world leaders prepared to return home from the Washington ‘loose nukes’ summit, there were two leading schools of thought about what it accomplished.  One, exemplified by Joseph Cirincione at The Daily Beast, hailed the summit as the beginning of the end of the Strangelovian era of nuclear terror.  “Calculated subtlety and strategic […]

The Guns of the Civil War Still Echo In Our Heads

It was 149 years ago today that deeply misguided Confederate hotheads rejoiced as they began the bombardment of Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor.  The Confederate cabinet in Montgomery had determined on the attack, overriding the prescient advice of Secretary of State Robert Toombs that to fire the first shot “will lose us every friend at […]

Faith Matters: Will Barbie Save The Episcopal Church?

It appears that the Episcopal Church is beginning at long last to take evangelism seriously.  Over at the very useful news source RNS, there are not only the usual stories about evangelicals holding mass meetings and preaching to tens of thousands of people.  Evangelism is, after all, not just a question of Rick Warren preaching […]

Literary Saturday: Lifetime Reading List

Last week I wrote about the standpoint, the place from which you look out on the world.  I described my own standpoint, growing up in the American south, the outskirts of London and a New England boarding school (or, as I once described it to a group of students in a religious school in Pakistan, […]

Good News For Gloomy Greens

OK, you may be saying.  Maybe Mead is right that the One Big Treaty approach to climate change is a non-starter.  And maybe he’s right that the various bills working their way through Congress aren’t going to amount to all that much either.  And, just possibly he’s right that the two Green Princes, Al Gore […]

Doing What Comes Naturally

Yesterday’s post on climate change was pretty gloomy.  A combination of scientific uncertainty, green ineptitude and the volume of other insistent global problems competing with the green agenda for resources and attention add up to near-certain for greens who think the only way to Save the Planet is to cut carbon use by international decree […]

The Naked Green Emperors Must Stand in Line

Sometimes, you don’t have to be an emperor to have no clothes.  Just being the Prince of Wales can be enough.  After all, in May of 2008 Prince Charles warned the world that we had only eighteen months left to save the planet from spiraling climate disasters.  Twenty-three months later we are struggling to cope […]

Why AIPAC Is Good For The Jews — and For Everyone Else

Two cheers for AIPAC; this is not the most popular sentiment in the foreign policy world, where the American Israel Public Affairs Committee is often both feared for its power and loathed for an approach to Middle East policy that, in the opinion of its many critics is often seen as unsubtle, one-sided and unhelpful.I’d […]

An Easter Literary Buffet

Today’s post was written by Sam, Research Associate for Team Mead at the Council on Foreign Relations. He studied political science and English at Yale.Giving me the reins of The Blog for the day (and Easter no less!) is daunting—a bit like when Mr. Mead lets me dust and clean the statue collection in the […]

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