WikiLeaks, Pakistan and the Ghost of Vietnam
What's said about sausage and journalism must also be true of foreign policy: that if you knew how it was produced, you wouldn't want to consume it.
What's said about sausage and journalism must also be true of foreign policy: that if you knew how it was produced, you wouldn't want to consume it.
Disgrasian | Posted 05.25.2011
It seems everywhere you turn these days, you hear another story about WikiLeaks -- or Assange, really -- and lady parts.
Fatima Bhutto | Posted 05.25.2011
What will Pakistan's elite learn from WikiLeaks? Undoubtedly nothing. And if we're going by the White House's response so far, nor will Washington feel more constrained than it ever has running its informal global empire.
Jayshree Bajoria | Posted 05.25.2011
The release of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables by WikiLeaks.org has further shaken Washington's already strained relations with Pakistan, a strategic ally central to any success in Afghanistan and the fight against terrorism.
Saad Khan | Posted 05.25.2011
Whistles are blowing again, causing storms in the teacups. It has happened before but this time; it is a global leak, involving dozens of countries. T...
Posted 05.26.2011
This article is being updated. The New York Times is reporting that leaked cables concerning Pakistan reveal fear of the country's nuclear program a...
Saad Khan | Posted 05.25.2011
There will be plenty of diplomatic war of words in the coming days over these leaks. The revelations, however, have accomplished what they were intended to do.
HuffingtonPost.com | Dan Froomkin | Posted 05.25.2011
The public expression of modern American diplomacy is typically so dull and disingenuous that one of the pleasing revelations from the unauthorized re...
Ethan Casey | Posted 07.26.2011