New Issue Announcement - 2003-12-23

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Tuesday December 23, 2003


Partnership and Principle

On newsstands January 6, the January/February 2004 issue of Foreign Affairs leads with an essay by Colin Powell about the strategy behind the Bush administration's foreign policy.

The complete text of selected essays and all the book reviews from this issue are available on the Foreign Affairs Web site—look for the label "full text" in the listing below. You may still receive this issue by mail if you subscribe to Foreign Affairs by January 31, 2004.





















COMMENTS

The Law of War in the War on Terror

Kenneth Roth

The Bush administration has literalized its "war" on terrorism, dissolving the legal boundaries between what a government can do in peacetime and what's allowed in war. This move may have made it easier for Washington to detain or kill suspects, but it has also threatened basic due process rights, thereby endangering us all. FULL TEXT

The Politics of AIDS: Engaging Conservative Activists

Holly Burkhalter

American evangelicals have put the fight against AIDS on Washington's map, even while clashing with other activists over strategy. Now all must unite behind a comprehensive approach stressing effective practices in prevention and treatment. 500-WORD PREVIEW

Beyond the Abu Sayyaf

Steven Rogers

Washington has made the fight against radical Muslim separatists in the Philippines a critical front in its war on terrorism. But its one-size-fits-all approach reflects a dangerous misunderstanding of the problem—and could make things worse. 500-WORD PREVIEW

ESSAYS

A Strategy of Partnerships

Colin L. Powell

Pundits claim that U.S. foreign policy is too focused on unilateral preemption. But George W. Bush's vision—enshrined in his 2002 National Security Strategy—is far broader and deeper than that. The president has promoted bold and effective policies to combat terrorism, intervened decisively to prevent regional conflicts, and embraced other major powers such as Russia, China, and India. Above all, he has committed the United States to a strategy of partnerships, which affirms the vital role of international alliances while advancing American interests and principles. FULL TEXT

The Saudi Paradox

Michael Scott Doran

Saudi Arabia is in the throes of a crisis, but its elite is bitterly divided on how to escape it. Crown Prince Abdullah leads a camp of liberal reformers seeking rapprochement with the West, while Prince Nayef, the interior minister, sides with an anti-American Wahhabi religious establishment that has much in common with al Qaeda. Abdullah cuts a higher profile abroad—but at home Nayef casts a longer and darker shadow. FULL TEXT

Don't Cry for Cancún

Jagdish Bhagwati

Despite the dramatic collapse of the recent trade talks in Cancún, things aren't nearly as bad as they seem. Cancún was no Seattle, as will soon become clear when progress resumes on Doha Round negotiations. Fault for the conference's breakdown lies with all the major parties, but the damage can quickly be remedied. 500-WORD PREVIEW

How to Stop Nuclear Terror

Graham Allison

President Bush has called nuclear terror the defining threat the United States now faces. He's right, but he has yet to follow up his words with actions. This is especially frustrating since nuclear terror is preventable. Washington needs a strategy based on the "Three No's": no loose nukes, no nascent nukes, and no new nuclear states. 500-WORD PREVIEW

The Terrorist Threat in Africa

Princeton N. Lyman and J. Stephen Morrison

The Bush administration has focused on destroying al Qaeda in East Africa, but it has been slow to address less-visible terrorist threats elsewhere on the continent, such as Islamist extremism in Nigeria and criminal syndicates in West Africa's failed states. This indifference could be costly—for Africans and Americans both. 500-WORD PREVIEW

Kenya After Moi

Joel D. Barkan

Kenya's fragile government is threatened by factionalism, economic challenges, and rising crime. To ensure Nairobi's involvement in the war on terrorism, Washington must be sensitive to its domestic needs, recognizing that fledgling democracies can be more difficult to engage than their authoritarian predecessors. 500-WORD PREVIEW

Mexico at an Impasse

M. Delal Baer

Three years into Mexico's democratic revolution, few of its hopes have been realized: the political system is gridlocked, the economy is stagnant, and relations with the United States are deteriorating. A crisis is not imminent, but progress must come soon if Mexico's grand experiment with political and economic liberty is to continue. 500-WORD PREVIEW

The Reluctant Partner

Peter Hakim

Growing differences over trade and foreign policy threaten to upset the delicate balance in U.S.-Brazil relations. To head off trouble, Washington should lower its expectations, remembering that it has a greater stake in Lula's domestic success than in Brazil's active cooperation on any particular issue. 500-WORD PREVIEW

A Duty to Prevent

Lee Feinstein and Anne-Marie Slaughter

The unprecedented threat posed by terrorists and rogue states armed with weapons of mass destruction cannot be handled by an outdated and poorly enforced nonproliferation regime. The international community has a duty to prevent security disasters as well as humanitarian ones—even at the price of violating sovereignty. 500-WORD PREVIEW

BOOK REVIEWS

A False Alarm: Overcoming Globalization's Discontents

Richard N. Cooper

A new book by an eminent economist takes on globalization's critics, disarming them with logic and killing them with compassion. FULL TEXT

The Secret Agents: Life Inside an al Qaeda Cell

Camille Pecastaing

An Algerian journalist who infiltrated a terrorist cell in France reveals how a clash of cultures has turned Muslim immigrants into radical Islamist militants. FULL TEXT

RESPONSES

Fleeing the Chilean Coup: The Debate Over U.S. Complicity

William D. Rogers and Kenneth Maxwell

Former Assistant Secretary of State William D. Rogers disputes charges of U.S. complicity in the rise and rule of Pinochet; Kenneth Maxwell replies. FULL TEXT


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Best Books of the Past Year

Walter Russell Mead / United States

Each month a member of our panel of book reviewers recommends the best books discussed in Foreign Affairs in the past year. For December 2003, Walter Russell Mead gives his picks for the best books on the United States. Read

Most Popular Online Reprints

For November 2003

1. The Next Prize by Daniel Yergin and Michael Stoppard (November/December 2003)

2. China Takes Off by David Hale and Lyric Hughes Hale (November/December 2003)

3. America's Imperial Dilemma by Dimitri K. Simes (November/December 2003)

4. Japan's New Nationalism by Eugene A. Matthews (November/December 2003)

5. The Clash of Civilizations? by Samuel P. Huntington (Summer 1993)

6. The Future of Energy Policy by Timothy E. Wirth, C. Boyden Gray, and John D. Podesta (July/August 2003)

7. Not in Oil's Name by Leonardo Maugeri (July/August 2003)

8. U.S. Power and Strategy After Iraq by Joseph S. Nye, Jr. (July/August 2003)

9. Adjusting to the New Asia by Morton Abramowitz and Stephen Bosworth (July/August 2003)

10. A Trusteeship for Palestine? by Martin Indyk (May/June 2003)



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