Georgianne Nienaber, 11.11.2009
Investigative journalist, searcher, and author
Congo's economy is not undermined by "unregulated fertility" rates. Civil society has been destroyed by decades of war and over a hundred years of exploitation of Congo's wealth by international interests.
Julia Gorin, 11.11.2009
Below is the original version of my letter that the Wall Street Journal published today. Because of space considerations, there was no room for the wh...
Chris Weigant, 11.10.2009
Author, Political Commentator, and Blogger (ChrisWeigant.com)
The fall of The Wall signified the fall of the Soviet Union, and an end to the Cold War. And while this was of enormous historical import, I fear that future generations won't really pay much attention to it.
Harut Sassounian, 11.04.2009
Publisher of The California Courier, a weekly newspaper based in Glendale
A prominent legal expert, Mr. Geoffrey Robertson, exposed this week the false and inaccurate statements on the Armenian Genocide made by the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
Russ Wellen, 11.04.2009
Staff blogger at Scholars & Rogues
Unless nuclear states can shed the Cold War mentality once and for all, it's hard to be optimistic about the long-terms prospects for disarmament.
Oleg Kozlovsky, 11.03.2009
Leading Russian Democracy and Human Rights Activist
As democracy and civil rights in Russia diminish every year, the country is becoming more of a police state. The voice of dissent is silenced by cynical and cruel country leadership.
Evelyn Leopold, 10.31.2009
Veteran reporter at the United Nations
The aim is to set standards for the global $55 billion export business in guns, tanks, attack helicopters, jet fighters, missiles and other conventional weapons.
Betwa Sharma, 10.29.2009
Betwa is the NY/UN correspondent for the Press Trust of India.
Prison conditions worldwide are worse than the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture could have imagined. Jails without air, toilets and food are not rare.
Chris Weigant, 10.29.2009
Author, Political Commentator, and Blogger (ChrisWeigant.com)
Technology has grown by such leaps and bounds since 1969 that it's hard to conceive how things were before we all had access to computers.
Bruno Pellaud, 10.28.2009
Former Deputy Director General, IAEA
Iran's refusal and counter-proposal to shipping low-enriched uranium to Russia is unacceptable. But before slamming the door on talks, two alternative arrangements still deserve consideration.
Gloria Duffy, 10.28.2009
President of the Commonwealth Club of California
The US is entering a season of key international negotiations, during which two arms control treaties that have been languishing for years will hopefully be completed.
Robert Amsterdam, 10.26.2009
International lawyer on emerging markets, politics of business, and rule of law
The ungrateful chauvinism of U.S. foreign policy reaches far beyond a rant provided by Joe Scarborough, who at least has the excuse of being in the business of manufacturing polemics.
Christopher Herbert and Victoria Kataoka Rebuffet, 10.23.2009
Editors of Simple Intelligence
The Past Two Week's Top Stories in International Affairs:
The Real Deal with Iran
The 5+1 (UN Permanent Security Council Members plus Germany) were a...
Robert Amsterdam, 10.24.2009
International lawyer on emerging markets, politics of business, and rule of law
Sunday Oct. 25, 2009 will mark the sixth anniversary of the arrest at gunpoint of the Russian political prisoner Mikhail Khodorkovsky. Over these lon...
William Bradley, 10.21.2009
California-based Political Analyst NewWestNotes.com
Obama is in a multi-faceted complex of geopolitical crises. He is actively using military force in two of the countries, and has threatened, at the least, tough sanctions in the third.
John Brown, 10.20.2009
Adjunct Professor of Liberal Studies, Georgetown University
Hillary Clinton has broken with tradition. She, a high-ranking government official, has admitted that her government engaged in propaganda.
Eric Ehrmann, 10.19.2009
Writes on sports and global issues from Brazil; a member of PEN
With efforts to rebrand America's national identity in the electronic media falling flat like a bad online date, taking away the dollar's too big to fail status might be the better wake up call.
Amb. Marc Ginsberg, 10.17.2009
Former US Amb. to Morocco
At a time when both Russia and China are trying to readjust their diplomatic bearings with Washington, why not join the West for a while in toughening sanctions against Tehran?
Keith Thomson, 10.17.2009
Reporter and author
Say the Pakistani government somehow falls to the Taliban. With a maniac at the button, cities in the Pakistani arsenal's 2,500-kilometer range could get turned into vacant lots.
Hoyt Hilsman, 10.15.2009
Journalist, screenwriter, critic, recent candidate for Congress
A lengthy and focused counterinsurgency effort might eventually produce results, but its chances of success are greatly diminished by the political climate in Afghanistan.
Leon T. Hadar, 10.14.2009
Journalist and foreign affairs analyst
"I have to admit that I'm beginning to miss George W. Bush," is the way former Republican Senator "Chuck" Hagel responded when being asked by CNN's Wolf Blitzer to assess the foreign policy record of the administration of Republican President John McCain.