Peace and Security
Colombia Is No Model for Mexico’s Drug War
When Washington ramped up its anti-drug efforts through Plan Colombia, more than 90 percent of the cocaine consumed in the United States came through Colombia. A decade later, we still get about 90 percent of our cocaine via Colombia.
Let’s Stay out of Libya
Yet again, our leaders think they’ve got a calling to save a country in the Middle East.
The Government’s Nuclear Millstone
The Obama administration is making a big fuss over its proposal to boost the Energy Department’s budget to $29.5 billion.
Surprise: Guess Who Wants Gun Control?
Irony isn’t a town, but a concept. Though the state’s political leaders don’t seem at all familiar with it. Claiming to represent the will of the people, they’ve enacted the most free-wheeling gun toting laws in America – no state has fewer restrictions. Which brings us to irony: a recent poll reveals that far from being a wild bunch of devil-may-care gun-slinging ideologues, a majority of Arizonans actually want tougher gun laws. Overall, 55 percent of the residents favor more stringent controls.
More U.S. Aid Won’t End Mexico’s Drug War
With all the astoundingly grisly incidents involving Mexico’s armed forces these days, one thing is clear: the drug war is failing. The Mexican military shouldn’t get another penny of U.S. military aid. However, the White House’s new budget proposal calls for pumping another $282 million into Mexico’s drug war next year.
War Is Hell, Even if You Survive
When you’re back.
Forget for a moment the death, devastation, deprivation, disease, displacement, and despair visited upon civilians in war zones. Let’s briefly contemplate the fate of soldiers. Ours, anyway. We really don’t know (or care) much about theirs except for the reported killings of “suspected militants.” “Suspected militant” has come to mean anybody we happen to kill–man, woman, or child.
A Military Budget on the Wrong Side of History
The Obama administration is scrambling to get on the right side of history. It has a lot of ground to make up. History is mostly judging the United States these days for launching, and now perpetuating, the longest wars in our history.
New START’s Nuclear Compromise
Despite New START’s substantive merits and overwhelming bipartisan support, the eight-month-long campaign to win the U.S. Senate’s approval was a knock-down-drag-out fight, the successful outcome of which was in doubt until the very end.
The Media Flunks WikiLeaks 101
Maybe we were fortunate that the U.S. press chose to print any WikiLeaks disclosures at all. Given the media’s generally supportive stance of unilateral American foreign policy, it could have simply said, “We’re not interested.” Luckily it did better than that, but not much. The media reported articles of minor diplomatic embarrassment with glee, but let matters revealing serious U.S. government perfidy or brutality slide.
Egypt and Reversing the Dominoes of Domination
The U.S. policy of policing the world and imposing our will on every aspect of the international system is now tumbling–from Tunisia, Lebanon, Yemen, Jordan, Egypt, and onward throughout the Middle East. The domino theory, coined to justify our war in Vietnam, is making a comeback. Not because we ignored communist threats, but because we intervened too much in too many countries.