The Delusion of an Arab World
Franck SalamehIn 1999, long before the fitful rise and fall of the 2011 “Arab Spring,” former Arab-nationalist author and intellectual Hazem Saghieh published a scathing critique of what he considered...
View ArticleHungary and the Reversibility of Liberal Democracy
Paul R. PillarThe Hungarian parliament building, a grand neo-Gothic landmark along the Danube, is an enduring stone monument to representative government. Plans for such a structure were made in the...
View ArticleTehran's Man in Baghdad
Kevjn LimShrine of Imam Ali in Najaf, Iraq.The last round of the P5+1 talks weren't held in volatile Baghdad by chance. While Iran's nuclear dispute still has no clear endgame in sight, the next phase...
View ArticleFifty Years of Paradigm Shifts
Lewis McCraryA half century ago, an obscure professor of the history of science did something rare in academic life: he wrote a scholarly monograph that had an enduring impact on both the academy and...
View ArticleEvangelists of Democracy
David Rieff LIKE THE human-rights movement, democracy promotion is a radical project of social and political transformation whose adherents will not or cannot acknowledge either the ideological or the...
View ArticleDrone Strikes and Just War
James Jay CarafanoPresident Obama’s drones are all over the map—and so is public opinion about U.S. covert operations against transnational terrorists. The recent domestic grumbling over drones is...
View ArticleThe Associated Press and the Metaphysics of Illegal Immigration
John Allen GayThere are, in the eyes of the Associated Press, no longer any illegal immigrants.The media group announced that the AP Stylebook, a set of guidelines used by it and many other media...
View ArticleThe Fallacy of Human Freedom
Robert W. MerryThe Silence of Animals: On Progress and Other Modern MythsJohn Gray, The Silence of Animals: On Progress and Other Modern Myths (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013), 288 pp.,...
View ArticleEllsberg and Snowden
Marvin KalbThey were both whistleblowers—Edward Snowden in 2013 and Daniel Ellsberg in 1971—both having disclosed classified information to the public. But there is one huge difference between the...
View ArticleThe Case for Norman Angell
Jacob HeilbrunnOVER A century ago, a talented British newspaperman sent a manuscript on the irrationality of war to numerous London publishers. It was uniformly rejected on the grounds that the public...
View ArticleTracing China's Long Game Plan
Jacqueline Newmyer DealWealth and Power: China's Long March to the Twenty-first CenturyOrville Schell and John Delury, Wealth and Power: China’s Long March to the Twenty-First Century (New York: Random...
View ArticleSyria and the Moral Follies of Humanitarian Warfare
Kim R. HolmesPresident Obama has made many arguments for his intervention in Syria. It’s necessary to enforce “international norms.” It will send Syrian President Assad a “message.” It would “degrade”...
View ArticleMachiavelli: Still Shocking after Five Centuries
Stewart PatrickOf all the writers in the “realist” canon—from Thucydides and Hobbes to Morgenthau and Mearsheimer—it is Niccolo Machiavelli who retains the greatest capacity to shock. In 1513, banished...
View ArticleGerman Liberalism: an Endangered Species?
E. Wayne MerryThe British historian AJP Taylor believed that in Germany, classical liberalism always fails in the competition of political ideas. For over six decades, the Free Democratic Party (FDP)...
View ArticleWestern Civilization's Life Coach
David Rieff The Cave and the Light: Plato Versus Aristotle, and the Struggle for the Soul of Western CivilizationArthur Herman, The Cave and the Light: Plato Versus Aristotle, and the Struggle for the...
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