If you have trouble reading this e-mail, please go to http://www.foreignaffairs.org/e_newsltr/current.html
 |
 |
 |
|
You're reading the newsletter of Foreign Affairs magazine. See About This Newsletter (below) for information about your subscription.
|
May 2, 2007
WEB EXCLUSIVE
Goodbye, Yeltsin
 |
The passing of Boris Yeltsin last week renewed debates about his tenure as Russia's first post-Soviet leader and the impact that his presidency — for better or worse — continues to have on Russia today. Writing in Foreign Affairs over a decade ago, Russia expert Stephen Sestanovich argued that Yeltsin had made headway in securing Russia against the three challenges that threatened its survival as a democratic republic: the military and the KGB, the old regime's all-powerful managers of the economy, and ultranationalism. In a new exclusive postscript, Sestanovich now concludes that history's judgment of Yeltsin will ultimately depend on the Russian people's ability to finish what he had imperfectly begun.
|
| |
Advertisement
From the government of Taiwan: Support Taiwan's Membership in the WHO
As the world faces the threat of an avian influenza pandemic, Taiwan is applying for WHO membership, a fundamental right denied it for a decade.
Taiwan is a vital link in global disease prevention.
Secure the health of Taiwan's 23 million people and the rest of the world. Write to your representative and ask them to support Taiwan's bid or visit http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/ say-yes-to-taiwan-s-bid-to-who.html.
For further information also visit: http://www.gio.gov.tw, and http://unwho.blogspot.com.
"The goal of all nations must be the protection of health of all human beings without any discrimation . . ."
— World Medical Association
|
 |
Previously in Background on the News
|
| |
World Bank Woes April 18, 2007 Paul Wolfowitz's current travails are hardly the only difficulties he has had to face since becoming president of the World Bank in March 2005. . . . Read more
|
 |
| |
Public to Bush: Enough Already April 4, 2007 Public anguish over Iraq is spilling into other areas of U.S. foreign policy, according to the latest results from the Confidence in U.S. Foreign Policy Index. . . . Read more
|
 |
| |
The Hill is Alive With the Sound of Hearings March 21, 2007 As the Democrats approach their 100th day in control of Congress, one thing has already set them apart from their Republican predecessors: the large number of oversight hearings on issues relating to foreign and national security policy. . . . 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:
- 46% 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 May 2007
The topselling books on international affairs based on national sales at Barnes & Noble stores and barnesandnoble.com during April 2007.
- The World Is Flat
Thomas L. Friedman
- Second Chance
Zbigniew Brzezinski
- Power, Faith, and Fantasy
Michael B. Oren
Complete list
|
|
Most Popular Article Reprints
|
|
Purchased online at foreignaffairs.org during April 2007
1. Blowing the Horn by John Prendergast and Colin Thomas-Jensen (March/April 2007)
2. Unprepared for a Pandemic by Michael T. Osterholm (March/April 2007)
3. College Goes Global by William R. Brody (March/April 2007)
4. How the Street Gangs Took Central America by Ana Arana (May/June 2005)
5. The Future of Lebanon by Paul Salem (November/December 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 2007 by the Council on Foreign Relations, Inc. All rights reserved |
|