Congo, Zimbabwe, North Korea, Sin Kiang and Honduras, are hot spots that have turned or are likely to turn violent. But the Middle East is different in two ways. It is the longest continuously war-ridden area in modern history. And at least since September 11, it has become a domestic American issue. US soldiers continue to die in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the US newly established Department of Homeland Security will be long busy tracking enemy combatants, infiltrators, and ordinary American citizens ready to take up the cause of radical Islam
In May, Middle Eastern leaders met with President Obama at Camp David for a meeting of the Gulf Coop...
In 2011, the Arab Awakening offered an opportunity to the Obama administration to advance the US int...
This is a response to the Obama interview with Al Arabiya on January 26. I highlight the contrast be...
Congo, Zimbabwe, North Korea, Sin Kiang and Honduras, are hot spots that have turned or are likely t...
Barack Obama, as a new President of the United States, came holding the torch of changed discourse w...
Last week President Obama gave a major policy speech on the Middle East which sought to present Amer...
Sitting in a focus group, a young Jordanian bewailed America's relationship with his region: "Since ...
Even though it still may be too early to make such assessments, one could claim that Barrack Hussein...
During his presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised to distance the United States from the neoco...
The conflict in Syria is likely to be one of President Obama’s most important foreign policy legacie...
As Obama begins his second term, this article takes stock of his foreign policy approach towards the...
More than two years after the U.S. pulled its last remaining combat troops out of Iraq, the Obama ad...
One of the magnitude effect of the horrific 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States and the subs...
Even though U.S. Middle East policies have long followed relatively predictable patterns (Quandt 200...
Late last week, President Obama announced that the US would begin targeted airstrikes against Islami...
In May, Middle Eastern leaders met with President Obama at Camp David for a meeting of the Gulf Coop...
In 2011, the Arab Awakening offered an opportunity to the Obama administration to advance the US int...
This is a response to the Obama interview with Al Arabiya on January 26. I highlight the contrast be...
Congo, Zimbabwe, North Korea, Sin Kiang and Honduras, are hot spots that have turned or are likely t...
Barack Obama, as a new President of the United States, came holding the torch of changed discourse w...
Last week President Obama gave a major policy speech on the Middle East which sought to present Amer...
Sitting in a focus group, a young Jordanian bewailed America's relationship with his region: "Since ...
Even though it still may be too early to make such assessments, one could claim that Barrack Hussein...
During his presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised to distance the United States from the neoco...
The conflict in Syria is likely to be one of President Obama’s most important foreign policy legacie...
As Obama begins his second term, this article takes stock of his foreign policy approach towards the...
More than two years after the U.S. pulled its last remaining combat troops out of Iraq, the Obama ad...
One of the magnitude effect of the horrific 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States and the subs...
Even though U.S. Middle East policies have long followed relatively predictable patterns (Quandt 200...
Late last week, President Obama announced that the US would begin targeted airstrikes against Islami...
In May, Middle Eastern leaders met with President Obama at Camp David for a meeting of the Gulf Coop...
In 2011, the Arab Awakening offered an opportunity to the Obama administration to advance the US int...
This is a response to the Obama interview with Al Arabiya on January 26. I highlight the contrast be...