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  • January 21, 2018
    Forbes.com
    Africa & Haiti: Global Rankings for Human Freedom
    … African countries and Haiti are impoverish and unstable. While stability might not be everything, everything is nothing without stability. It’s time for these countries to take a strong dose of policies that will enhance the freedoms of their citizenry.
    By Steve H. Hanke
  • January 12, 2018
    Blog
    An Invisible Trade War No Longer
    … than a decade, the United States and China have been quietly waging a trade war in the shadows of public policy. China’s pursuit of technological know‐​how has included objectionable tactics, such as the implementation of discriminatory innovation policies …
    By Daniel J. Ikenson
  • January 9, 2018
    American Conservative
    A Modest Proposal for Regime Change in North Korea
    … reach North Korea’s Supreme Leader. Featuring all the magical thinking that you’ve come to expect from the foreign policy establishment. Moreover, no one knows who would follow him. The problem with Kim is not that he is suicidal …
    By Doug Bandow
  • January 9, 2018
    Blog
    Stop Calling it an Opioid Crisis—It’s a Heroin and Fentanyl Crisis
    … is a crisis caused by drug prohibition—an unintended consequence of nonmedical drug users accessing the black market in drugs. Policymakers should stop harassing doctors and their patients and shift the focus to reforming overall drug policy. A good place …
    By Jeffrey A. Singer
  • January 8, 2018
    China-US Focus
    How U.S. Strategists Should View the People’s Republic of China
    … assistance against North Korea. Although the administration’s technique was maladroit, the document raised important questions about future U.S. policy toward the People’s Republic of China. For centuries Americans held somewhat romantic views toward China, and especially the …
    By Doug Bandow
  • January 7, 2018
    National Interest (Online)
    Will Trump Push a Real ‘America First’ Doctrine in 2018?
    … of Assad and enemy of ISIS; and counteract Russian intervention, focused on the single goal of bolstering Assad. Implementing this policy were officials who had been bungling U.S. foreign policy for years. At least Washington succeeded in the essential …
    By Doug Bandow
  • January 1, 2018
    The National Interest (Online)
    How to Guarantee a War with North Korea
    Keeping U.S. tripwire forces in East Asia no longer serves a logical or constructive purpose. They are hostages that limit Washington’s policy options, if officials conclude that neutralizing the North Korean threat warrants drastic action.
    By Ted Galen Carpenter
  • December 31, 2017
    The National Interest (Online)
    America Would Benefit from a Balance of Power in the Persian Gulf
    During the Cold War Washington’s close embrace of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia made a certain strategic sense, though the enthusiasm exhibited by American policymakers never did. Today a far more limited, arms-length relationship is needed.
    By Doug Bandow
  • December 19, 2017
    Blog
    All We Want for Christmas
    All We Want for Christmas
    Cato’s defense and foreign policy team outline their holiday wishlist for U.S. foreign policy. 
    By Emma Ashford
  • December 18, 2017
    The National Interest (Online)
    Trump to North Korea: Surrender First, Talk Later
    There is plenty wrong with U.S. foreign policy. But the single worst approach, which could lead America into a devastating war in Northeast Asia, might be that toward North Korea.
    By Doug Bandow
  • December 14, 2017
    Blog
    All I Want for Christmas is the Travel Ban to End
    Even though the Court’s decision does not necessarily mean that the ban will ultimately be upheld, the decision has had three immediate—and negative—foreign policy implications. 
    By Sahar Khan
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