Category: Uncategorized

Why the Iranian Election Results Are Good News

I’m feeling optimistic today because the hardest-line of two hard-line candidates (the one wanted for murder in more countries than the other) prevailed in the patent sham that the Iranian mullahs call an “election.” Having said that, I suppose I should explain myself. Does anyone really still believe that any candidate the Guardian Council would have allowed onto the Iranian ballot was amenable to real reform? That should have been the lesson of the Khatami presidency, which proved itself both...

Why the Iranian Election Results Are Good News

I’m feeling optimistic today because the hardest-line of two hard-line candidates (the one wanted for murder in more countries than the other) prevailed in the patent sham that the Iranian mullahs call an “election.” Having said that, I suppose I should explain myself. Does anyone really still believe that any candidate the Guardian Council would have allowed onto the Iranian ballot was amenable to real reform? That should have been the lesson of the Khatami presidency, which proved itself both...

Interview with Prof. Jae Ku, Freedom House’s New North Korea Director

OFK: Please tell us about your background–where you grew up, and what people, ideas, and philosophies influenced the shaping of your character. Jae Ku: I lived in Korea during my first eight years. I have two older brothers and a sister, so there were six of us. I grew up in Midwest, but mostly in Kansas. I spent most of my childhood in the town of Salina. I voted for the first time in 1988, for Mike Michael Dukakis. My...

The American Enterprise’s North Korea Issue

UPDATE: I’ve posted grafs from TAE’s North Korea issue here. All authors are excerpted, including Daniel Kennelly, Gordon Cucullu, Victor Davis Hanson, Nicholas Eberstadt, and Ambassador James Lilley. I strongly recommend that you just buy the whole thing. Hey, it’s only seven bucks. Original Post: The American Enterprise’s June issue focuses on North Korea, and has rounded up the thoughts of some of Washington’s strongest thinkers on the subject, including Victor Davis Hanson, Gordon Cucullu, Nicholas Eberstadt, and Ambassador James...

ADVANCE Democracy Act Update

It has passed a House committee, and is now headed for its Senate counterpart. My first-hand report on the press conference by Senators McCain and Lieberman and Reps. Wolf and Lantos here. My pissy whining about how the media blew the story here. The advance section-by-section summary, here. Current House version here; current Senate version here. The bill makes the spread of democracy a statutory part of U.S. foreign policy and appropriates funds to cultivate it.

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Heh: The North Korean delegation’s visit got off to a rocky start Tuesday when protesters displayed banners condemning the communist country’s leader. As the North Korean delegates were being driven from the airport to the hotel where the talks were scheduled, vehicles adorned with posters calling for Kim to be punished and displaying him tied in ropes drove close to their motorcade, one of the protesters said at a police station where he was taken for questioning along with two...

ADVANCE Democracy Act Update

It has passed a House committee, and is now headed for its Senate counterpart. My first-hand report on the press conference by Senators McCain and Lieberman and Reps. Wolf and Lantos here. My pissy whining about how the media blew the story here. The advance section-by-section summary, here. Current House version here; current Senate version here. The bill makes the spread of democracy a statutory part of U.S. foreign policy and appropriates funds to cultivate it.