Category: Uncategorized

The Bad Cop

Assistant Secretary of State Christopher “The Bad Cop” Hill appears to be moving away from a constraint on our previous diplomacy with North Korea–the idea that the nuclear question should be discussed in strict isolation from the more fundamental problem of North Korea’s closed society. And while the North Korean Human Rights Act threw human rights into the mix by force of law, the State Department hasn’t exactly shown enthusiasm for that. This, then, is a hopeful sign: WASHINGTON –...

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Not All Global Connectivity Advances Peace–Exhibit A: The police, under direct orders from Didymus Mutasa, the head of the secret police (Zimbabwe’s Central Intelligence Organization), have brutally removed any competition to Chinese traders whose shops have sprung up around the capital over the past few years. Mutasa said law and order had to be preserved and Harare’s Police Chief, Superintendent Oliver Mandipaka, said 9,653 people were arrested in the five-day blitz on street vendors, flea market stalls, and other informal...

111711998014279040

On the Virtues of Being Feared, Rather than Loved. The latter is nice, but if the cost is prohibitive, the former will do just fine: Syria has arrested more than 1,200 people trying to cross the border into Iraq in recent weeks and sent many back to their home countries because of suspicions they were trying to join the insurgency, Syria’s U.N. ambassador said. . . . . Mekdad said Syria suspected that those arrested — mostly foreigners — intended...

The Bad Cop

Assistant Secretary of State Christopher “The Bad Cop” Hill appears to be moving away from a constraint on our previous diplomacy with North Korea–the idea that the nuclear question should be discussed in strict isolation from the more fundamental problem of North Korea’s closed society. And while the North Korean Human Rights Act threw human rights into the mix by force of law, the State Department hasn’t exactly shown enthusiasm for that. This, then, is a hopeful sign: WASHINGTON –...

111712312675448821

Not All Global Connectivity Advances Peace–Exhibit A: The police, under direct orders from Didymus Mutasa, the head of the secret police (Zimbabwe’s Central Intelligence Organization), have brutally removed any competition to Chinese traders whose shops have sprung up around the capital over the past few years. Mutasa said law and order had to be preserved and Harare’s Police Chief, Superintendent Oliver Mandipaka, said 9,653 people were arrested in the five-day blitz on street vendors, flea market stalls, and other informal...

111711998014279040

On the Virtues of Being Feared, Rather than Loved. The latter is nice, but if the cost is prohibitive, the former will do just fine: Syria has arrested more than 1,200 people trying to cross the border into Iraq in recent weeks and sent many back to their home countries because of suspicions they were trying to join the insurgency, Syria’s U.N. ambassador said. . . . . Mekdad said Syria suspected that those arrested — mostly foreigners — intended...

The Death of an Alliance, Part 21: Call the Plumber!

Scroll down for updates. Most of it is true and needed to be said–at least privately–but exactly whose idea was it for a Japanese politician to take the lead in criticizing South Korea’s new shift from U.S. ally to “regional balancer?” And in public, no less? Japan’s Vice Foreign Minister Shotaro Yachi reportedly had harsh words for Korea during a recent visit of Korean lawmakers. He said Seoul had been neglecting its alliance with Washington although unity between South Korea,...

New UNHCR Head Named

The New York Times reports: Secretary General Kofi Annan on Tuesday chose António Guterres, a former Portuguese prime minister, to become high commissioner for refugees, replacing Ruud Lubbers, who quit in February after being accused of sexual harassment. . . . Mr. Guterres beat out a field of seven other candidates. Among them were Bernard Kouchner, a former French minister of health and a founder of Doctors Without Borders; Gareth Evans, a former Australian foreign minister; and Soren Jessen-Petersen of...

The Death of an Alliance, Part 21: Call the Plumber!

Scroll down for updates. Most of it is true and needed to be said–at least privately–but exactly whose idea was it for a Japanese politician to take the lead in criticizing South Korea’s new shift from U.S. ally to “regional balancer?” And in public, no less? Japan’s Vice Foreign Minister Shotaro Yachi reportedly had harsh words for Korea during a recent visit of Korean lawmakers. He said Seoul had been neglecting its alliance with Washington although unity between South Korea,...

New UNHCR Head Named

The New York Times reports: Secretary General Kofi Annan on Tuesday chose António Guterres, a former Portuguese prime minister, to become high commissioner for refugees, replacing Ruud Lubbers, who quit in February after being accused of sexual harassment. . . . Mr. Guterres beat out a field of seven other candidates. Among them were Bernard Kouchner, a former French minister of health and a founder of Doctors Without Borders; Gareth Evans, a former Australian foreign minister; and Soren Jessen-Petersen of...

Time for a No-Fly Zone Over North Korea’s “Closed” Areas

I’m deeply ambivalent about cutting food aid to starve out North Korea or force it back to the talks because I don’t believe in starving innocent people for political reasons, and because I want the North Korean people to be empowered to challenge their government–something starving people never are. Both Nicholas Eberstadt and Marcus Noland have made this point, but there aren’t any political philosophers I consider more insightful than Eric Hoffer, who said: The poor on the borderline of...

Time for a No-Fly Zone Over North Korea’s “Closed” Areas

I’m deeply ambivalent about cutting food aid to starve out North Korea or force it back to the talks because I don’t believe in starving innocent people for political reasons, and because I want the North Korean people to be empowered to challenge their government–something starving people never are. Both Nicholas Eberstadt and Marcus Noland have made this point, but there aren’t any political philosophers I consider more insightful than Eric Hoffer, who said: The poor on the borderline of...

Time for a No-Fly Zone Over North Korea’s “Closed” Areas

I’m deeply ambivalent about cutting food aid to starve out North Korea or force it back to the talks because I don’t believe in starving innocent people for political reasons, and because I want the North Korean people to be empowered to challenge their government–something starving people never are. Both Nicholas Eberstadt and Marcus Noland have made this point, but there aren’t any political philosophers I consider more insightful than Eric Hoffer, who said: The poor on the borderline of...