Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials -- March 12, 2013



Will North Korea Resume The Korean War? -- George Friedman, Real Clear World/Stratfor

On Jan. 29, I wrote a piece that described North Korea's strategy as a combination of ferocious, weak and crazy. In the weeks since then, three events have exemplified each facet of that strategy. Pyongyang showed its ferocity Feb. 12, when it detonated a nuclear device underground. The country's only significant ally, China, voted against Pyongyang in the U.N. Security Council on March 7, demonstrating North Korea's weakness. Finally, Pyongyang announced it would suspend the armistice that ended the Korean War in 1953, implying that that war would resume and that U.S. cities would be turned into "seas of fire." To me, that fulfills the crazy element.

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Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials

Syria, Bosnia, and the Old Mistakes -- Leon Wiesletier, New Republic

US repeating mistakes of past in Syria
-- Paul Londrigan, The Hill

Should The U.S. Arms Rebels In Syria? -- NPR

North Lebanon is Ready to Blow
-- Michael Totten, World Affairs

The End of the Two-State Solution Why the window is closing on Middle-East peace -- Ben Birnbaum, New Republic

Russia's Stake in the Afghan War -- David Satter, Real Clear World

Looking ahead to a post-Karzai Afghanistan
-- Washington Post editorial

To Hell With Karzai
-- Leslie H. Gelb, Daily Beast

Annoyed, China Sticks with North Korea -- Nayan Chanda, Real Clear World

The Putin Doctrine: Russia's Quest to Rebuild the Soviet State -- Leon Aron, Foreign Affairs

Is It Time for Spain to Dissolve the Monarchy? -- Juan Moreno, Spiegel Online

The Obama administration’s response to the Falklands referendum is insulting, wrong and mean-spirited -- Nile Gardiner, The Telegraph

Who’s going to stop kicking that U.S. fiscal can down the road?
-- Walter Pincus, Washington post

My search for a smartphone that is not soaked in blood
-- George Monbiot, The Guardian

The Global Swarm: Drones are not only spreading to other countries, they're becoming smaller and smarter. -- P.W. Singer, Foreign Policy

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