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Obama, Huckabee Stake Their Claims in Iowa
January 4, 2008
Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mike Huckabee triumphed in Iowa’s caucuses, vowing change at a time of deepening economic concerns. 
 
Globalization Anxieties
CFR’s Peter Beinart says the Iowa caucuses reveal shifts in the political beliefs of both parties’ bases.
 
 
Democrats in Denial
Op-Ed: CFR’s Michael J. Gerson argues Democratic campaign rhetoric seems inconsistent on Iraq and other issues.
 
 
 
Blog: Iowa Results 
CFR Issue Trackers 
Speeches and Debates 
Online Debate
Should U.S. Recognize Kosovo? 
Podcasts, Audio, Video
Future U.S.-China Policy 
Kenya's Political Mess 
Wine Industry's Future 
Video: Benazir Bhutto 
Private Security Contractors 
Gwertzman Asks Experts
Beinart: Iowa Caucus Reflections 
Haass: Pakistan's Future 
Riedel: Bhutto's Assassination 
Mead: Foreign Policy Report Card 
Oberdorfer: S. Korea's Elections 
Recent Backgrounders
Pakistan's Civil Institutions 
110th Congress and Foreign Policy 
Rebuilding Iraq 
Oil Market Volatility 
Al-Qaeda in North Africa 
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Terrorism 
Iran 
Must Reads 
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China 
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Securing the Campaign 
 The assassination of Benazir Bhutto highlights the challenges of protecting U.S. candidates.
 
 
 
Washington’s Diplomatic Thaw 
 After a year of stern rhetoric toward Iran, the Bush administration is showing a renewed preference for diplomacy.
 
 
 
Pakistan's Frayed Politics 
 Bhutto’s assassination and the turmoil that followed highlight serious problems in Pakistan’s transition toward democracy.
 
 
 
Kenya’s Political Mess 
 CFR’s Michelle Gavin discusses the violence and political tumult that have erupted in the wake of Kenya’s December elections. 
 
 
 
2008: For Bush, a Make or Break Year 
 After recent U.S. foreign policy shifts, 2008 will reveal whether enough time remains for George W. Bush to lock in significant achievements.
 
 
 
Nothing New in Pyongyang 
 North Korea misses a deadline to declare details of its nuclear program, imperiling a U.S.-brokered denuclearization deal.
 
 
 
Winemakers Feel the Heat 
 As climate change emerges as a problem for the world’s established wineries, some grape growers eye cooler regions.
 
 
 
Turning Water into Gold 
 As concerns grow over the increasing scarcity of fresh water, some experts weigh trading it as a commodity.
 
 
 
Marching into Cyberspace 
 Looking to broaden its reach and control its message, the U.S. federal government is increasingly turning to the blogosphere.
 
 
Richard Haass in the National Interest: Today’s Global Challenges Warrant an Interest-Based Foreign Policy
 
Campaign 2008 in Foreign Affairs: A Series of Articles by Top Candidates on Their Foreign Policy Agendas
 
David Victor participates in National Interest symposium on resource wars
 
Daniel Markey Outlines Options for U.S. Policy on Pakistan in New Council Paper
 
January/February 2008
“America's Priorities in the War on Terror” by Michael D. Huckabee 
“A New Realism” by Bill Richardson 
Experts in the News
Russia (1/2): Ray Takeyh looks at the evolving relations between Iran, Russia, and the United States as they pertain to global energy markets, in the International Herald Tribune.
Pakistan (12/28): Mohamad Bazzi urges Congress to “increase pressure on the Bush administration to drop its support of the autocratic and ineffective Musharraf,” in the Daily News.
Persian Gulf (12/27): Walter Russell Mead argues that the security of domestic energy supplies plays a relatively small role in U.S. Persian Gulf policy, in the Wall Street Journal.
Britain (12/23): Walter Russell Mead writes that “British politics are boring no longer,” in the Washington Post.
U.S. Economy (12/21): Mark Fisch and Benn Steil write that the U.S. must “root out bad debt or more pain will follow,” in the Financial Times.
Iraq (12/21): Mohamad Bazzi looks at the implications of Muqtada al-Sadr’s decision to become an ayatollah, in the Nation.
  
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Copyright 2008 by the Council on Foreign Relations. All Rights Reserved.
Tor·que·ma·da (tôrk-mäd, tôrk-mää), Tomás de 1420-1498. Spanish Dominican friar who was appointed grand inquisitor by Pope Innocent VIII (1487). Under his authority, thousands of Jews, suspected witches, and others were killed or tortured during the Spanish Inquisition.
sábado, 5 de enero de 2008
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