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The Nine Lives of Tony Blair

by Gerald A. Dorfmanvia Hoover Digest
Saturday, July 30, 2005

Tony Blair’s political career has survived more upheavals than that of any politician since Bill Clinton. The question in Britain at the moment? How many of his nine lives Blair has left. By Gerald A. Dorfman.

How Long?

by Charles Wolf Jr.via Hoover Digest
Saturday, July 30, 2005

When will the regime of Kim Jong Il finally collapse? By Charles Wolf Jr.

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The Passive Revolution

by Jared A. Cohen, Abbas Milanivia Hoover Digest
Saturday, July 30, 2005

Hard-liners may have gained a near stranglehold over the political and judicial sectors in Iran, but there is one critical sector they do not control—the people. By Jared A. Cohen and Abbas Milani.

Liberty First, Democracy Later

by Peter Berkowitzvia Hoover Digest
Saturday, July 30, 2005

The best way to promote democracy abroad? By first promoting liberty. By Peter Berkowitz.

Political Reform

Taizhou Area Explores Ways to Improve Local Governance

by Joseph Fewsmithvia China Leadership Monitor
Saturday, July 30, 2005

Standing apart from the many recent reports of rural instability is an account of a different nature: It singles out a township in a region of Zhejiang Province known nationally for its flourishing market-based prosperity, where innovative reforms have been implemented to enhance popular participation in political decisions. Although these reforms are intended to strengthen the rule of the Chinese Communist Party in local affairs and not as a step toward democratic transition, they do suggest that the growth of "social capital" at the local level is bringing about greater public roles in policymaking, improving local governance, and perhaps even changing, albeit to a limited degree, the way the party operates at the local level.

Foreign Policy

Looking Beyond the Nuclear Bluster: Recent Progress and Remaining Problems in PRC Security Policy

by Thomas Christensenvia China Leadership Monitor
Saturday, July 30, 2005

At a July press conference, PLA Major General Zhu Chenghu appeared to threaten nuclear first strikes on the United States in retaliation for American intervention in the Taiwan Strait. Predictably, General Zhu's remarks received tremendous attention in Washington and elsewhere. In addition, the Pentagon's recently released annual report on Chinese military power evoked a harsh and excessive reaction in Beijing. Unfortunately, therefore, when many Americans reflect on the past few months of U.S.-China security relations, they will think of the specter of nuclear exchanges. In general, however, Beijing's diplomacy on security issues over the same period has improved, a more basic trend that should not be overshadowed by General Zhu's bluster and Beijing's heated response to the Pentagon report.

Bush Country

by Fouad Ajamivia Hoover Digest
Saturday, July 30, 2005

In the Arab world, there is something new and exhilarating in the air—a debate on the meaning of freedom. By Fouad Ajami.

The Democracy Problem

by William Ratliffvia Hoover Digest
Saturday, July 30, 2005

In Latin America these days, democracy isn’t working very well. Indeed, it almost never has. Why? By William Ratliff.

Why We Must Stay

by Victor Davis Hansonvia Hoover Digest
Saturday, July 30, 2005

Why the war in Iraq is not like the war in Vietnam—and why the present conflict must not be permitted to end the way the former conflict ended. By Victor Davis Hanson.

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Chirac’s Last Stand?

by Patrick Chamorelvia Hoover Digest
Saturday, July 30, 2005

This past spring voters in France and the Netherlands rejected the new constitution for the European Union—and dealt a stinging rebuff to French president Jacques Chirac. Can Chirac recover? By Patrick Chamorel.

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