Bashar Assad: Exit Stage Left?

The Washington Post reports: Beset by U.S. attempts to isolate his country and facing popular expectations of change, Syrian President Bashar Assad will move to begin legalizing political parties, purge the ruling Baath Party, sponsor free municipal elections in 2007 and formally endorse a market economy, according to officials, diplomats and analysts. . . . . Emboldened opposition leaders, many of whom openly support pressure by the United States even if they mistrust its intentions, said the measures were the...

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The Joongang Ilbo is reporting a rumor, still unconfirmed, that Kim Jong Il is inviting Condi Rice to Pyongyang for a visit. If it’s true, feel free to speculate that the Dear Leader is scared and ready to crack–for now. A “bilateral” meeting with a senior U.S. official would give him a face-saving way to do it. His real goal? To buy time, hopefully another three and a half years. If the Bush Administration sticks to the “verifiable” and “irreversible”...

Time to Reassess the Uzbek Alliance

What has happened in Uzbekistan now clearly appears to have been a massacre of hundreds, committed by a government with which the United States has a military alliance. How the Bush Administration responds to this moral challenge will determine whether the usual suspects who accuse the United States of hypocrisy in its calls for global democratization will gain a useful talking point for their recruitment drives. I’m not immune to the demands of realpolitik, and I swallowed my discomfort over...

G.W. Bush’s Double-Dog Dare

Little Joshua’s illness started to crowd out my blogging time when I first noticed this link (HT: The Marmot). It’s just too good not to reproduce some choice, succulent portions. Aside from having a solid grasp of what the regional players are thinking, Mac Johnson writes so well he gives me acute writer’s envy: In its latest major accomplishment as an industrial power, North Korea has dug a really big hole. Usually such a hole would be filled with the...

The Death of an Alliance, Part 19

This morning, the sun rose, flowers opened, the earth rotated, and South Korea offered North Korea yet more money to do something its fertile and depraved minds had not even thought of scant months ago. Then, it publicly pretended that there was nothing to worry about in any event. In other news, waves continue to lap against the shore and glaciers are still crawling downhill. And the day after the U.S. warned North Korea not to test a bomb (or...

G.W. Bush’s Double-Dog Dare

Little Joshua’s illness started to crowd out my blogging time when I first noticed this link (HT: The Marmot). It’s just too good not to reproduce some choice, succulent portions. Aside from having a solid grasp of what the regional players are thinking, Mac Johnson writes so well he gives me acute writer’s envy: In its latest major accomplishment as an industrial power, North Korea has dug a really big hole. Usually such a hole would be filled with the...

G.W. Bush’s Double-Dog Dare

Little Joshua’s illness started to crowd out my blogging time when I first noticed this link (HT: The Marmot). It’s just too good not to reproduce some choice, succulent portions. Aside from having a solid grasp of what the regional players are thinking, Mac Johnson writes so well he gives me acute writer’s envy: In its latest major accomplishment as an industrial power, North Korea has dug a really big hole. Usually such a hole would be filled with the...

The Death of an Alliance, Part 19

This morning, the sun rose, flowers opened, the earth rotated, and South Korea offered North Korea yet more money to do something its fertile and depraved minds had not even thought of scant months ago. Then, it publicly pretended that there was nothing to worry about in any event. In other news, waves continue to lap against the shore and glaciers are still crawling downhill. And the day after the U.S. warned North Korea not to test a bomb (or...

Second Group Refugee Interview: North Korean Neocons!

Thanks again to reader Brendan Brown and his North Korean refugee students in Seoul, who have agreed to a second group interview to share their opinions about their homeland and give us a rare–albeit unscientific–glimpse into the perspective of ordinary North Koreans. Undoubtedly, it took great courage for them to discuss matters that could put them or their families at risk. For their protection, I have redacted details that could identify them. Brendan is an Australian national who teaches English...

Second Group Refugee Interview: North Korean Neocons!

Thanks again to reader Brendan Brown and his North Korean refugee students in Seoul, who have agreed to a second group interview to share their opinions about their homeland and give us a rare–albeit unscientific–glimpse into the perspective of ordinary North Koreans. Undoubtedly, it took great courage for them to discuss matters that could put them or their families at risk. For their protection, I have redacted details that could identify them. Brendan is an Australian national who teaches English...