Friday, January 4, 2013

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials -- January 4, 2013



Hugo Chávez’s Constitution Is a Muddled Map Out of Venezuela’s Crisis -- Tim Padgett, Time

Venezuela’s 1999 constitution is one of President Hugo Chávez’s proudest political props. The socialist leader likes to wave a pocket-size version of the charter, written shortly after he first took office 14 years ago, as often as Chinese communists used to brandish Chairman Mao’s Little Red Book. But now that the 58-year-old Chávez may be fighting for his life in a Cuban hospital after difficult cancer surgery, Venezuelans are turning to his so-called Bolivarian constitution for guidance — and what they’re finding instead is a murky map that could send the western hemisphere’s most oil-rich nation into precarious governmental limbo this year.

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Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials

Syria’s Alawites Under Siege -- Ali Hashem, Al-Monitor

Syria on track to become Islamic state
-- Fred Gedrich, Washington Times

The Palestinian Implosion -- Ziad Asali and Ghaith Al-Omari, Foreign Policy

How to Talk to Iran -- Seyed Hossein Mousavian and Mohammad Ali Shabani, New York Times

China’s Communist inheritance: A ticket to wealth -- Washington Post editorial

China's Rules of the Game
-- Brett Shehadey, National Interest

Why Japan Can't Compete With China
-- Brian Fung, The Atlantic

No Easing in the European Crisis -- Desmond Lachman, The American

Depardieu Aside, the Rich Aren’t Moving to Russia -- Robert Frank, CNBC

Benghazi threat level was ‘flashing red’ on 9/11: Obama State Department still owes Americans answers -- Joe Lieberman and Sen. Susan M. Collins, Washington Times

Foreign policy will define Obama’s second term
-- Andrew Hammond, Business Day

Al Jazeera in America -- New York Times editorial

Why Economists Are United in Their Dislike of the Fiscal Cliff Deal -- Christopher Matthews, Time

What does Google want with North Korea?
-- Donald Kirk, Christian Science Monitor

The countries that won't let you name your kid something ridiculous -- Joshua Keating, Foreign Policy

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