Thursday, December 24, 2009
The next decade in context
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Demographics and China's economy

Copenhagen coalition already falling apart

As for previous examples of this sort of international negotiation, the series of multilateral trade negotiations resulting in the WTO (now stuck on the Doho round) is probably the best contemporary historical guide we have, and it moved along at a glacial pace. I think probably the only good to come of Copenhagen is the global networking of civil society representatives and activists who can push their governments on the national level towards action.
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Well it could be worse...
Thursday, December 17, 2009
WTF?! Major blow to all current US wars
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Watershed Russian reformer dead

Also well worth checking out is this piece of analysis, also in the FT, examining the state of play within Russia's highly dynamic power elite and what it might mean for the future: "Russia: Shift to the shadows."
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Someone perfectly articulates my problem with Obama diehards for me
Obama's nobel speech
The sections in which he wrestles with the moral ambiguities of war and peace were to me the most interesting. Unfortunately, his thinly veiled policy justifications just reminded me of all the ways he has failed to honor his principles in my opinion. I think I need to exhibit more patience with him though- either he's slowly working his way towards his vision and struggling mightily, or he is morally disingenuous. Even if he fails, I hope its the former...
China's apollo program for green energy
How the escalation happened
Thursday, December 10, 2009
The Drone War

Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Unemployment in America
Martin Wolf on the global "slow moving train wreck"

Check out another great comment piece by Martin Wolf (I hope he puts his columns since last fall into a book), which is I think is his most persuasive and forceful explanation of the potentially catastrophic effects of global trade imbalances yet: "Why China's exchange rate concerns us." This article will be of interest for anyone wondering about the big picture of the global economy at present or is curious about why Americans are so often up in arms about China's currency.
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Remember Iraq?

I am equal parts amazed that the recent spate of violence in Iraq has gotten such nonchalant attention in the US media and annoyed that each successive bombing is labeled by a lazy press corps some sort of "reminder" (brutal, bloody, etc...) of the lingering insurgency there - maybe it never left, but our attention did? Anyways, this happened recently: "Coordinated Bombings Kill at Least 101 in Baghdad."
Brooks' innovation agenda
Friday, December 4, 2009
Outrageously inappropriate Congressional actions in Africa
I would consider myself a fairly conservative realist when it comes to the appropriate degree of democracy and "human rights" promotion in US foreign policy, and it is always a challenge balancing our cultural and historical values with our interests. However, in this case I am absolutely offended that these representatives of our government actually promoted such obscene persecution of vulnerable populations- and in the name of a minority set of values in the US as a whole! More incredible still to my mind, for what other than personal satisfaction did these men sully our reputation? What possible benefit for the United States does promoting (not even simply ignoring) this behavior provide? This sort of situation should be the definition of the word scandalous... not some bullshit sexual escapades in the personal life of an elected official.
On the hunt for an Afghan endgame
Thursday, December 3, 2009
What do recent dev'ts in Honduras mean?
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Trade disputes

First of all, what a wonder that we have a global mechanism for adjudicating trade disputes instead of getting involved in self-destructive tariff wars. I found this chart reflecting trade dispute activity at the WTO very interesting.
Chart and following caption from The Economist: "IN THE 15 years since its birth on January 1st 1995, 401 trade disputes—over matters ranging from export curbs on minerals to restrictions on the import of seal products—have been brought to the World Trade Organisation’s dispute settlement body (DSB). The bulk of cases have been brought by a few litigious WTO members. America and the European Union have lodged 176 cases since the WTO came into being, and are also the most frequently complained against. Rich countries were the heaviest users of the DSB in the first five years of its existence, filing more than three-quarters of all complaints. But in the ten years since, that share has fallen to just over half, as big emerging economies have become active trade litigators."
Nice juxtaposition in coversage
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
The Big Afghanistan Speech
I like this speech a lot, and I support giving our president's plan a fair chance to succeed... but I am deeply skeptical about how this is going to work and there are some ponderous incongruities in this speech. I suppose it goes without saying that I'll be posting here about how this all pans out- but I promise not to overwhelm this blog with A-stan.
Monday, November 30, 2009
Hilarious!

Photo essay

I think this photo essay is really cool: "Portraits of Power." The photographer apparently took these portraits in a little booth outside the general assembly meeting at the UN this past fall.
We must have more strategery!
How many Muslims has the US killed in the last 30 years?

About the chart: "Here's my back-of-the-envelope analysis, based on estimates deliberately chosen to favor the United States. Specifically, I have taken the low estimates of Muslim fatalities, along with much more reliable figures for U.S. deaths. "
Steve Walt is trying to be deliberately provocative with this blog post, but it stands considering nonetheless: "Why they hate us (II): How many Muslims has the US killed in the last 30 years?"
Although it does cast the conflict in just the sort of "civilizational" tones we ought to avoid to ask how many Muslims have Americans killed (Americans can't be Muslims?).
Some interesting science
Back from Thanksgiving
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
A "war surtax" should be more than just a sign of frustration
Monday, November 23, 2009
Don't get it, but an interesting peek
US finance still dancing to the wrong song?
If this is a bit outside your expertise, the question is basically, Banks are being forced to buy tons of government debt (bonds) because they are supposedly super-safe assets, but why should we assume that they will remain so and what happens if they're not? It's a scary question, b/c this sort of "perpetual" motion machine of super low central bank rates financing a ton of sovereign bond purchases is the current foundation of both the US government's borrowing and the American banks' recovery- but it's hard to say what happens when the music stops.
GM raises interesting questions
Interesting profile
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Germany piling on
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Hamilton was MAD street
Obama's dearth of action on climate change
US, Egypt and Iran wobble as Turkey cleans up
Also, Ive recently been reminded that the FT only allows a certain number of free articles on its website if you're not a subscriber and I'm certain I post more than that number. For the ppl regularly following my links, would it be more convenient if I could try to find other sources where possible? Pls leave any responses in the comments section.
Monday, November 16, 2009
Our gov't has certainly fallen fast
From Cuba to cornfields
Lessening expectations from Copenhagen
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Graveyards and history in A-stan
Thursday, November 12, 2009
New York City: 1930 to today
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
A great argument for tougher competition enforcement
Sachs: Stimulate restructuring, not consumption
Of course it is easy to just say, instead of governing by necessity we should be setting policy strategically. But this is a democracy and its tough to think long term in our system of government so I'm inclined to give Obama some leeway. But Sachs is absolutely right that we need to be orienting our policy towards a fundamental restructuring of our economy (plus, economics aside, I cringe for our environment when pundits claim we need to 'ramp up consumption'). The one we've got hasn't been working.
Afghanistan's "Narcotecture"

Lightbulbs in the middle of nowhere
Slower posting, I know
Old art that speaks to our current struggles
Arithmetic on the Frontier
A GREAT and glorious thing it is
To learn, for seven years or so,
The Lord knows what of that and this,
Ere reckoned fit to face the foe -
The flying bullet down the Pass,
That whistles clear: " All flesh is grass."
Three hundred pounds per annum spent
On making brain and body meeter
For all the murderous intent
Comprised in "villainous saltpetre".
And after?- Ask the Yusufzaies
What comes of all our 'ologies.
A scrimmage in a Border Station-
A canter down some dark defile
Two thousand pounds of education
Drops to a ten-rupee jezail.
The Crammer's boast, the Squadron's pride,
Shot like a rabbit in a ride!
No proposition Euclid wrote
No formulae the text-books know,
Will turn the bullet from your coat,
Or ward the tulwar's downward blow.
Strike hard who cares - shoot straight who can
The odds are on the cheaper man.
One sword-knot stolen from the camp
Will pay for all the school expenses
Of any Kurrum Valley scamp
Who knows no word of moods and tenses,
But, being blessed with perfect sight,
Picks off our messmates left and right.
With home-bred hordes the hillsides teem.
The troopships bring us one by one,
At vast expense of time and steam,
To slay Afridis where they run.
The "captives of our bow and spear"
Are cheap, alas! as we are dear.
-R. Kipling
(source: Arithmetic on the Frontier)
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Sy Hearch on Pakistan's nukes
Children's movies are often really grown up

Check out this article (really a short essay) by Times movie critic A. O. Scott on how children's movies in recent years tend to be much more complex and realistic than the ones geared towards adults: "Unleashing Life's Wild Things On Screen."
I totally agree with him, in particular I think "Wall-e" and "Where the Wild Things Are" are two of the most intellectually and emotionally complex and interesting (not to mention best) movies I've seen in recent years.
Friday, November 6, 2009
Sign of the times

Taken from economist.com here.
More daft trade policy from Obama admin.
Cool photo essay

Thursday, November 5, 2009
Thinking about the Tories
If you're still interested, I'd highly recommend this article on Rory Stewart, who is now standing for a safe Tory seat: "Rory Stewart: A new kind of Tory." There really seems to be a great deal of excitement about his candidacy in the UK, and I am greatly looking forward to following his political career.
Bad news for Afghan war
You'll recall that the UN pulled out of Iraq after a its headquarters were bombed in 2003, killing special representative Sergio Vieira de Mello and 16 others. I have read in various places that the UN's exit was a turning point for the worse in the situation in Iraq. I hope this isn't viewed the same way in the future. At the very least, that's just that many more US civilians that will be needed for our war effort (and we're already way short...).
Huh, Really Makes You Think...
For an entertaining rant about why anyone would actually say something like this in public, see Matt Taibbi: "Goldman One-Ups Gordon Gecko, Says Jesus Embraced Greed."
This just might be a disturbing window into the worldview of some of these individuals (or at least this particular one and his staff, still awful).
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Currency: the elephant in the room
Great comment on what markets are for
And now for something completely different...
Real Talk on A-stan
His conclusion: In A-stan, as it was in in Vietnam, 'victory' is irrelevant b/c it it will not significantly affect the US' global standing, whereas conducting the war is activily harming our position.
Monday, November 2, 2009
Why I hate the Washington Post
I used the Post's editorials in my grad thesis as a straw man representing how outrageously alarmist American analysis of the August war in Georgia was last summer. I'm glad to see that future generations of students writing on US foreign policy will have the same crutch...
Election, what election?
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Trade blowback
From recession to stagnation
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Sometimes all you can do is laugh
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Sen. Kerry on Counterinsurgency
" 'We cannot and we should not undertake a manpower-intensive counterinsurgency operation on a national scale in Afghanistan,' said Kerry, D-MA, sounding a lot like his Senate cohort Carl Levin, D-MI, who has also advocated for a strategy centered around building up Afghan forces, not adding U.S. combat soldiers.
'I am convinced, from my conversations with General Stanley McChrystal ... he understands the necessity of conducting a smart counterinsurgency in a limited geographic area,' Kerry went on, 'But I believe his current plan reaches too far too fast.' "
I think I can live with limited counterinsurgency, as long as our strategy explicitly acknowledges the limits of this approach and shies away from our recent grandiose ambitions for Afghanistan. I read somewhere recently that Kerry might make a good Secretary of State, and I have to admit his thinking on the big issues have been a lot more interesting than Sec. Clinton's...
The Garbage Island

Foreign Service Officer resigns over Afghan war
Monday, October 26, 2009
George Soros is right
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Photo Essay

Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Unbelievable
This is enough to literally make me gag:
Dr. Daniel E. Fass, another chairman of the event who lives surrounded by financiers in Greenwich, Conn., said: “The investment community feels very put-upon. They feel there is no reason why they shouldn’t earn $1 million to $200 million a year, and they don’t want to be held responsible for the global financial meltdown.” Dr. Fass added, “How much that will be reflected in their support for the president remains to be seen.”
Intense story
Great article on the future of political science
I felt the issues discussed in the article very keenly at Columbia. I believe the very best political science comes from applying rigorous empirical analysis to the underlying assumptions of broader questions, my favorite example being a paper I read on whether the "hate radio" accused of fermenting genocide in Rewanda actually played such a central role. (It didn't- the paper demonstrated that b/c of the hilly geography the radio had a very limited range and the chronology of the Rwandan genocide didn't match the pattern of inflamatory broadcasts.) This particular question was of central importance because of the way the radio station's history was used in prosecuting war crimes and in rebutting claims that Western governments could have "just simply bombed the radio transmiters to stop the genocide." But for the broadest (and most important questions) I think you are into political philosophy or history.
Karzai caves
Afghanistan is heading towards some sort of "constitutional coup" in my opinion... the US gov't is obviously looking for some legalistic way to push Karzai out of the loop. At least we're not having him shot in the back of an APC like our last client in a counterinsugency.
On the Goldstone report
Monday, October 19, 2009
Kicking down doors on Wall st.
Friday, October 16, 2009
How is the stimulus doing?
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Explaining the problem with Goldman
My favorite quote:
"Thus, at the heart of the financial system, now sits a professionals-only, high-risk Wall Street firm with its own private equity and hedge funds arrayed on top of a nonpareil corporate and government client list, which taxpayers reasonably assume is gambling with their money.
You do not have to be a vampire squid-style conspiracy theorist to see the difficulty. Goldman wants to carry on as its old self (but bigger) in a world that has changed."
Baby steps on climate change
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
What caused the crash: the one sentence explanation
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Frontline: Obama's War
Here's the link to the PBS site for the episode, which has lots of great supplemental stuff (maps, interviews, documents, etc.). I'd recommend checking it out. Powerful stuff.
What a smaller footprint in A-stan might look like
I think that sounds pretty good, but it would hinge on how long we could remain in Afghanistan without completely eroding the legitimacy of our mission.
Monday, October 12, 2009
Great news for Armenia and the South Caucasus
Turkey and Armenia are finally on the path towards normalizing their bilateral relations. Although this event directly affects a small corner of the earth, I think this is a huge deal. When I was living in Yerevan I cannot overstate the extent to which Armenia's sealed border with Turkey warped daily life in that impoverished country and in the region as a whole. Even for a comparatively wealthy American, travel from Armenia to Turkey was prohibitively expensive and full of hassles, involving either a flight (once a week I think) to far away Istambul or a very bumpy car ride hours north to Georgia and then over the border into Turkey. And this despite the fact that Turkey was literally close enough to look at. This move will hopefully bring some much needed dynamism to both Armenia and the South Caucasus as a whole.
The picture above is of Mount Ararat. I took it from the balcony of my apartment and saw it almost every day just like the other residents of Yerevan, Armenia's capital and largest city. Ararat is a sacred mountain for Armenians and plays a central role in their national identity (its even on their national coat of arms- its the mountain right in the middle). However, since Ararat is just across the border it has been very difficult to visit and served as a constant reminder of the painfully strained relations with neighboring Turkey, over the Armenian-Azeri war earlier in the 1990s and the historical questions surrounding the Armenian genocide (or whatever you want to call it, not trying to be provocative). That mountain always felt to me like a looming reminder of the the artificial cleavages left in the wake the wars of the 1990s, and honestly even as a visitor I found it galling that I couldn't really visit. Hopefully that will soon change.
Update: If you're interested in a concise rundown of the issues involved with the detente, check out this article at Foreign Policy.
The PRC is still on a roll in Africa
Friday, October 9, 2009
Barack Obama, Nobel laureate
I like his response, I think it takes this award and casts it in the best possible light while attempting to use it to further his particular causes/policies. However, I find something that Obama explicitly acknowledged in his speech uncomforable: "And I know that throughout history, the Nobel Peace Prize has not just been used to honor specific achievement; it's also been used as a means to give momentum to a set of causes." Obama considers this prize a nudge by the Nobel commission (I don't know why I care what they think anyways, but here goes) towards a certain type of American policies and politics, and I agree with him.
Don't get me wrong, I find some of those policies and causes attractive and I generally think Obama's vision for the world is a positive one. But I can't help being rubbed the wrong way, just a bit by what amounts to a very public intervention in American politics. And if this sort of intervention- an honor no less!-causes me to react this way, I can't help but worry about how people in the developing world feel when we come and tell them to run their governments or live their lives a certain way.
I think this is actually one of the central ironies of American foreign policy- we jealously guard our sovereignty as a "city on a hill" yet insist on preaching our gospel to everybody else (something that Reinhold Nieburh commented on best and far more eloquently in The Irony of American History if you're interested).
In any case, a "teachable" moment for me. I wonder if anyone else reacted this way?
Rep. Alan Grayson on A-stan
Perfect hilarity at Glenn Beck's expense
The Colbert Report | Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
Bend It Like Beck | ||||
http://www.colbertnation.com/ | ||||
|
Obama wins Peace prize?
"I am a genuine admirer of Obama. And I am very pleased that George W Bush is no longer president. But I doubt that I am alone in wondering whether this award is slightly premature. It is hard to point to a single place where Obama’s efforts have actually brought about peace - Gaza, Iran, Sri Lanka? The peace prize committee say that he is being rewarded for his “extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy”. But while it is OK to give school children prizes for “effort” - my kids get them all the time - I think international statesmen should probably be held to a higher standard.
It is also very odd timing. In the next couple of weeks, Obama is likely to yield to the wishes of his generals and to send many thousands more troops to Afghanistan. That will mean he is a wartime president, just as much as Bush or Lyndon Johnson. If Afghanistan ends up being Obama’s Vietnam, giving him the Nobel Peace Prize will look even sillier in a few years time." (his orignal post is here)
Yeah, remember that war in err... Afghanistan?
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Drought in East Africa
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Where did American conservatism go so wrong?
Of interest regardless your personal political leanings...
Obama shifts China policy
I think this is a very big deal, and in fact is a huge shift. It is a sign of a more realist, pragmatic approach to China and is more in tune with efforts at creating a real partnership between the world's two most important countries. I always felt like calling for China to become a "responsible stakeholder" in the international system (which we created...) sounded like the scolding of a disappointed parent... Im glad to see that the new China team has less of a tin ear.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Interesting insight into UK politics
You will not be eating fish in 30 years

The global over-exploitation of fish stocks and the rampaging of our ocean's ecosystems will be familiar to anyone who regularly reads The Economist, but other than them I am always shocked at how little attention this gets. If you're interested The Economist did a special report on this not too long ago: "Plenty of fish in the sea?"
Monday, October 5, 2009
So... this is akward...
Seriously, Israel would be compelled to grant him citizenship if he asked, right?
Update: this may or may not be true... I've read conflicting reports. Anyone have any insight? Either way its a great story.
Friday, October 2, 2009
Noah Schachman's photo diary
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Front Line: "Obama's War"
Khalaf on Sanctions
Sen. Kerry on Iran
Happy Bday PRC

Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Tom Friedman nails it
"Financial systems are accidents waiting to happen."

The Tip of the Spear
1) whether China will be able to reign in and reorient its economy's focus on production for export- assuming that the US' spendthrift days are not coming back anytime soon, this is exceptionally important to rebalancing the world's economy and China's development in general; and
2) whether the world will actually reduce its carbon output- this is a battle that will be either won or lost in the developing world and (assuming current trends continue) most of all in China.
Something to keep an eye on.
Sad story
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
The Art of Wall St.

Steve Coll, Afghan Sage

Monday, September 28, 2009
What the crisis means
Germany's election
Friday, September 25, 2009
The People's Republic of China at 60

Also from the FT today, check out this really cool interactive timeline of highlights of the PRC's history over its 60 year lifespan.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
An Afghan history lesson by Steve Coll
Thinking about climate change
I've come late to this video (by 2 years...), but I really like it. It's a very smart way of looking at climate change- through the prism of risk management rather than scientific certainty. Apparently this guy has a book now that's supposed to be pretty good too.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Some real thinking on Afghanistan?

Although Mr. Obama has said that a stable Afghanistan is central to the security of the United States, some advisers said he was also wary of becoming trapped in an overseas quagmire. Some Pentagon officials say they worry that he is having what they called “buyer’s remorse” after ordering an extra 21,000 troops there within weeks of taking office before even settling on a strategy.
Steve Coll explains it all
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Probably a big deal for the internets
I am always shocked that these sorts of stories don't get more notice in the general public, considering how incredibly important the internet is to most of our lives. How much would it suck if you could only get Comcast sponsored websites through your Comcast internet service?
Headscarves and European Education
Sec. Gates in focus
Photo Essay in China

Check out this photo essay about the preparations for the 60th anniversay of the founding of the PRC. Looks at least as stunning as the opening ceremonies for the Beijing Olympics, right?
Monday, September 21, 2009
Climate change confusion
Sec. Clinton on Missile Defense
I predict this will continue to be a touchy issue both here and in Europe in the near future.
Friday, September 18, 2009
Insight into Post- 9/11 America
Michael Scheuer is eloquent as he shakes us by the shoulders: That damn dog has been barking nonstop for eight years!
But what to make of the question — which is posed really as an all-American trope — That there was no next bark?
9-11 was a work of art the likes of which we have not seen since Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph des Willens. If war is a liturgy of identity, then war’s theater is truly religious art. Walking through its bloody gallery across the Anthropocene, it will be hard to find a more compelling and transcendental masterpiece. 9-11 shifted the trajectory of America in History.
Surely America’s relationship with the world has been darkly transfigured.
Until 9-11 the people of these United States were still (somewhat) passionately committed to the redemption of humanity. Today we are committed to the dog that didn’t bite.
In a sunlit September instant we jumped a passage from here to eternity. From the City on a Hill (John Winthrop, 1630) to a United Nations (Franklin Roosevelt, 1945) — our entire mythic passage of becoming — we ditched it all eight years ago. Bucked that baggage.In that instant our sacred narrative went from New Testament to Old Testament. Submit to us, convert to our faith — become like us — and ye shall prosper as our special wards.
Fight us — for whatever reason — and we will punish: Forever if need be.
We are so afraid now of another humiliation that we have made the entire world a source of threat — not simply to our physical self, but also to our geist, our very identity.
This is the dog that keeps on biting, drawing psychic American blood daily, draining our national persona, making us thrash in the pain: That we cannot control those who heap us, who task us.
Like Ahab we have been baited into heaping and tasking ourselves: Boxing ourselves into a never-ending cul-de-sac national ethos.
No longer “We Are the World” — more like, we hate the world. Just graze American blogs and listservs: NATO slackers and girly-men in Afghanistan, evil bearded Muslims, conniving and treacherous Chinamen, tattooed Latin drug pushers, pathetic Africans for whom “we can only do so much” ...
“The dog that didn’t bite” is a pristine portrait of regnant American nativism not seen since the 1930s. But at least the isolationists of that other eight-year era (1932-1940) were honest and true to their tough religious take on American nationalism. Now, what masque and masquerade we offer to the world! Our new nativists cloak their xenophobia in the magical rhetorical raiment of “Liberal Internationalism” — all the while hewing to a zeitgeist that is everyday pushing our nation remorselessly away from the mission — the essential American altruism — that once defined our identity.
What does all this mean?
It means that 9-11 achieved it all: It is an enduring realization in war’s theater. It is History’s ultimate performance art.
To bark again would put all this at risk.
This dog has had its day.
(here's a link to the original: http://security.nationaljournal.com/2009/09/on-the-911-anniversary-the-dog.php#1360027)