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Stories from 2002-12-01

A Grand Strategy of Transformation

John Lewis Gaddis | Foreign Policy | December 1, 2002

"President Bush's national security strategy could represent the most sweeping shift in U.S. grand strategy since the beginning of the Cold War. But its success depends on the willingness of the rest of the world to welcome U.S. power with open arms." [more]

In Terror War, 2nd Track for Suspects

Charles Lane | Washington Post | December 1, 2002

"The Bush administration is developing a parallel legal system in which terrorism suspects — U.S. citizens and noncitizens alike — may be investigated, jailed, interrogated, tried and punished without legal protections guaranteed by the ordinary system, lawyers inside and outside the government say." [more]

Peace Partners Keeping Hope Alive

Mary McGrory | Washington Post | December 1, 2002

"All three were surprised to find that Israeli papers print much fuller accounts of Israeli wrongs and Palestinian reprisals than those here. Peace groups there flourish and stage nonviolent protests. A large majority, there as well as here, favors separate states for Israel and Palestine. This sentiment is not reflected in the surveys of the present election campaign. The yearning for peace does not show up at all." [more]

The Rogues of Academe

Cullen Murphy | Atlantic Monthly | December 1, 2002

"The idea, simply put, is that democratically elected African leaders might not be so prone to overstay their welcome as chief executives (or to keep meddling in local politics after leaving office) if they had a well-endowed university sinecure in the United States to look forward to." [more]

Turn East From Mecca

Ralph Peters | Washington Post | December 1, 2002

"A struggle of immense proportions and immeasurable importance is underway for the soul of Islam. It is a mighty contest that pits a humane, tolerant and progressive faith against a hangman's vision of a punitive god and a humankind defined by prohibitions. And we have not even noticed." [more]

US Facing Bigger Bill For Iraq War

Michael Dobbs | Washington Post | December 1, 2002

"Although it is difficult to predict how much Americans would pay for a new war with Iraq, one fact seems indisputable: It will be many times more than the cost of the last war, if only because other countries are much more reluctant to share the burden." [more]

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