Winners and Losers in a New Middle East
The Arab Spring is the most profound foreign policy challenge facing the United States, and Washington’s response could help shape the course of the Middle East for decades.
The Arab Spring is the most profound foreign policy challenge facing the United States, and Washington’s response could help shape the course of the Middle East for decades.
They’re at obvious odds with the ostensible purpose of the siege — to benefit the Libyan people.
Nowadays decisions on war can quickly become back page stuff.
NATO is shirking “Responsibility to Protect” in favor of regime change in Libya.
Jihadists see a window of opportunity in Libya.
Ultimately, the administration is unlikely to use Libya as a precedent for intervention anywhere else.
It’s raining bullets in Libya, with cold hearts prevailing in Oman.
Can mourning Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros more deeply than Libyans who are killed be justified?
When there’s no oil, there’s no intervention.
We all owe a debt to Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros for their courage.
As NATO continues its campaign against Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s forces and to their attacks on Libyan civilians, Great Britain announced today it will send military officers to advise rebels fighters.
Intense fighting continues between rebels and Moammar Gadhafi’s forces as NATO nations met in Qatar to debate their next steps in Libya. Gwen Ifill discusses the NATO rift with the Institute for Policy Studies’ Emira Woods and the Brookings Institution’s Shadi Hamid.
What goes around comes around with arms exports, as the war in Libya demonstrates.
Opulent religious rhetoric is once again employed to justify absurd military actions.
Libya begs the question of how something as benign sounding as humanitarian intervention got such a bad rap.