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- 1From:National Review (Vol. 75, Issue 4)My fellow Americans, tonight I want to talk to you about the great foreign-policy challenge of our time--our strategy to contend with an increasingly ambitious and bellicose China. I speak to you to explain our approach...
- 2From:Joint Force Quarterly (Issue 108)History lights the often dark path ahead; even if it's a dim light, it's better than none. --James Mattis (1) It is no accident that many of our nation's finest military minds--George Patton, Douglas MacArthur,...
- 3From:The National Interest (Issue 182)Since their independence from the USSR, the five Central Asian states that emerged from the wreckage of the Soviet Union in 1991 have been the object of great power dreams. Russia, with steady persistence, has tried to...
- 4From:Joint Force Quarterly (Issue 107)The joint force is in a period of introspection, realizing, after 2 decades of counterinsurgency operations, that it has lost its monopoly on power. When military professionals and scholars discuss the ways the character...
- 5From:Foreign Affairs (Vol. 101, Issue 5)The global order is deteriorating before our eyes. The relative decline of U.S. power and the concomitant rise of China have eroded the partially liberal, rules-based system once dominated by the United States and its...
- 6From:Foreign Affairs (Vol. 104, Issue 4)Russia's invasion of Ukraine -- and China's implicit support for this violent attempt to subvert the international order--has intensified the strategic competition that now defines U.S. national security policy. What up...
- 7From:Foreign Affairs (Vol. 104, Issue 4)On February 27, a few days after Russia invaded Ukraine, Russian forces launched an operation to seize the Chornobaivka airfield near Kherson on the Black Sea coast. Kherson was the first Ukrainian city the Russians...
- 8From:Foreign Affairs (Vol. 104, Issue 4)Anyone who wonders about the potential of economic power need look no further than the response to Russia's attack on Ukraine. The dramatic measures taken by the United States and its allies illustrate the potency of the...
- 9From:Joint Force Quarterly (Issue 106)The varieties of skullduggery which make up the repertoire of the totalitarian government are just about as unlimited as human ingenuity itself, and just about as unpleasant. For, as you know, no holds are barred. There...
- 10From:Spectator (Vol. 348, Issue 10096)Taki Was it Socrates who said that chaos was the natural state of mankind, and tyranny the usual remedy? Actually it was Santayana, and boy, did he ever get it right. My friend Christopher Mills has given me a terrific...
- 11From:Spectator (Vol. 348, Issue 10095)Four years ago, Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping made pancakes together in Vladivostok while thousands of their military forces conducted joint exercises in Siberia. This month, as China hosted the Olympics, Putin and Xi...
- 12From:New Statesman (Vol. 151, Issue 5652)At the close of last year, Russia marked the 30th anniversary of what Vladimir Putin once called the "greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century": the collapse of the Soviet Union. A direct line can be drawn...
- 13From:New Statesman (Vol. 151, Issue 5650)Peng Shuai's social media post vanished from the internet within minutes. It was a detailed account, published late in the evening on 2 November 2021, alleging that Zhang Gaoli, China's former vice-premier, had forced...
- 14From:Foreign Affairs (Vol. 101, Issue 1)Xi Jinping savored the moment. Speaking before China's annual gathering of nearly 3,000 representatives to the National People's Congress in Beijing in March 2021, the Chinese president took a post-pandemic victory lap,...
- 15From:Joint Force Quarterly (Issue 104)The past two decades have been tough for strategists. Large-scale efforts in Central Asia and the Middle East did not bring the successes policymakers demanded, despite con siderable blood and treasure expended, and...
- 16From:Spectator (Vol. 347, Issue 10081)On the advice of doctors, Queen Elizabeth II will not attend this year's Festival of Remembrance at the Albert Hall. Her absence will be poignant. The Queen was 19 on VE Day in 1945. She served in uniform in the war, in...
- 17From:Foreign Affairs (Vol. 100, Issue 6)Donald Trump was supposed to be an aberration--a U.S. president whose foreign policy marked a sharp but temporary break from an internationalism that had defined seven decades of U.S. interactions with the world. He saw...
- 18From:Foreign Affairs (Vol. 100, Issue 6)It was a momentous choice. Three decades ago, the Cold War ended, and the United States had won. It was now the sole great power on the planet. Scanning the horizon for threats, U.S. policymakers seemed to have little...
- 19From:New Statesman (Vol. 150, Issue 5642)The abrupt disappearance of a familiar world leaves a sense of unreality in those who witness it. When an unhinged rabble stormed the Capitol building in Washington, DC in January, it was hard to believe the scenes...
- 20From:The Middle East'Stick or twist' sums up the changes of political power in America and China last month. President Obama won another four-year-term in Washington, while Xi Jinping assumed stewardship of China. This intricate...