Background on the News - 2006-07-26

If you have trouble reading this e-mail, please go to http://www.foreignaffairs.org/e_newsltr/current.html







 


published by the Council on Foreign Relations



You're reading the newsletter of Foreign Affairs magazine. See About This Newsletter (below) for information about your subscription. The Background on the News feature of www.foreignaffairs.org makes available the full text of past essays that are relevant today, plus occasional postscripts newly written by the authors.


July 26, 2006

Into the Briar Patch













The battle between Israel and Hezbollah continues to escalate, as Israel seeks to eliminate the terrorist organization. Despite Israel's military strength, the asymmetric nature of the conflict in some respects favors Hezbollah. In 2003 and again in 2005, Daniel Byman examined the options facing the United States as it considered what to do about the group and concluded that the only way to defeat Hezbollah was to move indirectly — by taking action against Syria and Iran, Hezbollah's backers.

 

Advertisement


NATION BRANDING MASTER CLASS WITH SIMON ANHOLT, WORLD'S LEADING EXPERT. LONDON — SEPTEMBER 8TH

Nation Branding Conference, September 8Strong country, city and regional brands attract investment, manufacturing, political influence and tourism. Many places spend significantly on advertising and media to enhance their potential in the world, but they can greatly benefit from marketing thinking that helps to uncover their best strengths and successfully transform their image. Countries, regions and cities need to compete in the global market by building their brands.

To see full details of the event and to register, please visit: www.nationbrandingconference.com.


 

Subscribe to Foreign Affairs

In the Current Issue of Foreign Affairs

Once proudly socialist and nonaligned, India is being remade as a roaring capitalist success story and emerging strategic partner of the United States. Economic reforms have raised per capita GDP and lowered poverty rates, while New Delhi's growing self-confidence may help it become the swing state in the global balance of power. In the July/August issue of Foreign Affairs, a special lead package has brought together four top experts to analyze the sources and implications of India's rise — and the policies necessary for it to continue.

 

The India Model

Gurcharan Das

After being shackled by the government for decades, India's economy has become one of the world's strongest. The country's unique development model — relying on domestic consumption and high-tech services — has brought a quarter century of record growth despite an incompetent and heavy-handed state.FULL TEXT

 

India and the Balance of Power

C. Raja Mohan

Washington has recognized the potential of a U.S.-Indian alliance, but translating that potential into reality will require engaging India on its own terms. 500-WORD PREVIEW

 

America's New Strategic Partner?

Ashton B. Carter

Over the last year, the U.S. and Indian governments struck a deal that recognizes India as a nuclear weapons power. Critics say Washington gave up too much too soon and at a great cost to nonproliferation efforts. FULL TEXT

 

Will Kashmir Stop India's Rise?

Sumit Ganguly

India's growing economic and diplomatic prominence is unlikely to be derailed by its territorial dispute with Pakistan over Kashmir. But given the risk that the Kashmir issue could spark a nuclear war, it is in India's best interest that it be resolved. 500-WORD PREVIEW


Also in this issue:


 

When the Shiites Rise

by Vali Nasr

By toppling Saddam Hussein, the Bush administration has liberated and empowered Iraq's Shiite majority and has helped launch a broad Shiite revival that will upset the sectarian balance in Iraq and the Middle East for years to come. FULL TEXT

 

Present at the Stagnation

by Andrew J. Nathan

In China's Trapped Transition, Minxin Pei attempts to solve the puzzle of China's present — and figure out its future. FULL TEXT


Previously in Background on the News


 

What to Do in Iraq: Responses, Round Two
July 17, 2006
In this special web-only feature, Christopher Hitchens, Fred Kaplan, Kevin Drum, and Marc Lynch respond to "What to Do in Iraq: A Roundtable," from the July/August issue of Foreign Affairs. For the second and concluding round of responses, the participants respond directly to each other. Also in Round 2, original roundtable authors Stephen Biddle and Larry Diamond rejoin the discussion. . . . Read more

 

What to Do in Iraq: Roundtable & Responses
July 12, 2006
In this special web-only feature, Christopher Hitchens, Fred Kaplan, Kevin Drum, and Marc Lynch respond to What to Do in Iraq: A Roundtable, from the July/August issue of Foreign Affairs. . . . Read more

 

Back to the Future
June 28, 2006
Whomever Mexicans vote for in Sunday's presidential election, the man they choose could become either a statesman who consolidates the country's democracy or a demagogue who returns the country to an era of crises. . . . Read more

 

Stay on Top of International Affairs with "The World This Week" Email Newsletter From the Council on Foreign Relations


To sign up for the newsletter, visit http://www.cfr.org/media and input your email address into "The World This Week" box.

Visit cfr.org.

 

Back to top.

 


Subscribe Now
and Save

Subscriber benefits include:

  • 40% off the newsstand price
  • Immediate online access to the current issue
  • Free access to one full-year of backissues
  • 50% discount on article purchases from the Foreign Affairs archives

SUBSCRIBE TODAY!

 

Foreign Affairs
Bestsellers
for July 2006

The topselling books on international affairs based on national sales at Barnes & Noble stores and barnesandnoble.com during June 2006.

  1. The World Is Flat
    Thomas L. Friedman
  2. The One Percent Doctrine
    Ron Suskind
  3. Guests of the Ayatollah
    Mark Bowden

Complete list

Most Popular Article Reprints

Purchased online at foreignaffairs.org during June 2006

1. The Globally Integrated Enterprise by Samuel J. Palmisano (May/June 2006)

2. Offshoring: The Next Industrial Revolution? by Alan S. Blinder (March/April 2006)

3. The End of the Bush Revolution by Philip H. Gordon (July/August 2006)

4. The New Middle Ages by John Rapley (May/June 2006)

5. India and the Balance of Power by C. Raja Mohan (July/August 2006)

6. Is Washington Losing Latin America? by Peter Hakim (January/February 2006)

7. Russia Leaves the West by Dmitri Trenin (July/August 2006)

8. China's "Peaceful Rise" to Great-Power Status by Zheng Bijian (September/October 2005)

9. The Last Exit From Iraq by Joel Rayburn (March/April 2006)

10. Transformational Leadership and U.S. Grand Strategy by Joseph S. Nye, Jr. (July/August 2006)

 

You've received this email because you subscribed to the HTML version of the biweekly Foreign Affairs email newsletter.

Use the following links to manage your subscription:

Foreign Affairs and the Council on Foreign Relations are located at:

58 East 68th Street
New York, NY 10065

Copyright 2006 by the Council on Foreign Relations, Inc. All rights reserved