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    • Indian Missile Deployments and the Reaction from China

      • May 23, 1999
      • Carnegie

      • Op-Ed

      China's No.1 Enemy

      • May 11, 1999
      • Carnegie

      • Op-Ed

      GOPeaceniks

      • May 10, 1999
      • Carnegie

      The congressional Republican party hit bottom last week. A majority of Republican House members cast two deeply irresponsible votes on the U.S. military action against Yugoslavia. No amount of Republican support for increased defense spending can cover up the shame of that vote. As GOP presidential front runner, Bush should lead and reiterate his position that America must win this war.

      • Op-Ed

      All Necessary Force

      • May 03, 1999
      • Carnegie

      • Op-Ed

      Divide and Survive

      • May 01, 1999
      • Prospect

      The partition of Kosovo--let alone Macedonia--and the acceptance of solutions involving partition for the Caucasus will take courage on the part of Western leaders, because it would require deals (especially with Russia) which will be unpopular with Congress. But at a time when servicemen are being required to show courage in the field, it is not inappropriate to ask their leaders to do the same.

      • Op-Ed

      Post-Imperial Africa at War

      • May 01, 1999
      • Carnegie

      • Testimony

      Challenge of Building Democracy in Kazakhstan

      • May 01, 1999
      • Carnegie

      • Op-Ed

      Law in Russia

      • May 01, 1999
      • Carnegie

      Why has Russian law not got stuck, although plenty of laws have been promulgated and all the legal bodies have undergone substantial reform? So why do not Russians trust and use the judicial system to a greater extent?

      • Testimony

      What Are Russian Foreign Policy Objectives?

      • May 01, 1999
      • Testimony before the House Committee on International Relations

      In making assessments of Russia's behavior in the world, it is critical that we recognize that Russia is not a totalitarian state ruled by a Communist Party with a single, clearly articulated foreign policy. That state disappeared in 1991. Rather, Russia is a democratizing state, and Russia's foreign policy, in turn, is a product of domestic politics in a pluralistic system.

      • Testimony

      Need for Executive Leadership

      • April 29, 1999
      • Carnegie

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