New Issue Announcement - 2004-06-21

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Monday June 21, 2004


Rethinking Iraq

On newsstands June 29, the July/August 2004 issue of Foreign Affairs assesses Iraq's new realities and sets out a practical agenda for dealing with global warming.

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 July 31, 2004.




















COMMENTS

A Global Power Shift in the Making

James F. Hoge, Jr.

Global power shifts happen rarely and are even less often peaceful. Washington must take heed: Asia is rising fast, with its growing economic power translating into political and military strength. The West must adapt -- or be left behind. FULL TEXT

Seeing the Forest

Eugene Linden, Thomas Lovejoy, and J. Daniel Phillips

Experience has shown that piecemeal efforts to protect tropical forests cannot do the job. Conservationists must rethink their approach, implementing conservation on a continental scale, and fast. 500-WORD PREVIEW

Strengthening African Leadership

Robert I. Rotberg

Poor leadership has been the depressing norm in Africa for decades. But as a bold new initiative by a group of past and present African leaders takes off, good governance may finally come to the continent. 500-WORD PREVIEW

ESSAYS

Beyond Kyoto

John Browne

Global warming is real and needs to be addressed now. Rather than bash or mourn the defunct Kyoto Protocol, we should start taking the small steps to reduce carbon dioxide emissions today that can make a big difference down the road. The private sector already understands this, and its efforts will be crucial in improving fossil fuel efficiency and developing alternative sources of energy. To harness business potential, however, governments in the developed world must create incentives, improve scientific research, and forge international partnerships. FULL TEXT

The Myth Behind China's Miracle

George J. Gilboy

Washington need not worry about China's economic boom, much less respond with protectionism. Although China controls more of the world's exports than ever before, its high-return high-tech industries are dominated by foreign companies. And Chinese firms will not displace them any time soon: Beijing's one-party politics have bred a timid business culture that prevents domestic firms from developing key technologies and keeps them dependent on the West. 500-WORD PREVIEW

History and the Hyperpower

Eliot A. Cohen

Whether or not the United States today should be called an empire is a semantic game. The important point is that it resembles previous empires enough to make the search for lessons of history worthwhile. Overwhelming dominance has always invited hostility. U.S. leaders thus must learn the arts of imperial management and diplomacy, exercising power with a bland smile rather than boastful words. FULL TEXT

A Republican Foreign Policy

Chuck Hagel

The war on terrorism must top the U.S. foreign policy agenda -- but it cannot be waged without also attending to the broader crisis in the developing world. Recognizing this, a Republican foreign policy should be guided by seven principles that seek to encourage stability, expand democracy, and strengthen key alliances. Above all, Washington must recognize that U.S. leadership depends as much on principle as it does on the exercise of power. 500-WORD PREVIEW

Saving Iraq From Its Oil

Nancy Birdsall and Arvind Subramanian

Of all the pressing questions facing Iraq today, perhaps the most important in the long run is what to do with the country's oil. Vast wealth from natural resources can often be a curse, not a blessing, corrupting a nation's political and economic institutions and impeding the growth of democracy. There is only one way for Iraq to resist the oil curse: by handing over the proceeds directly to the Iraqi people. 500-WORD PREVIEW

Containing Iraq: Sanctions Worked

George A. Lopez and David Cortright

The failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq has prompted much handwringing over the problems with prewar intelligence. Too little attention has been paid, however, to the flip slide of the picture: that the much-maligned UN-enforced sanctions regime actually worked. Contrary to what critics have said, we now know that containment helped destroy Saddam Hussein's war machine and his capacity to produce weapons. 500-WORD PREVIEW

Building Entrepreneurial Economies

Carl J. Schramm

The "Washington consensus" approach to development -- which urges other countries to emulate American capitalism -- misses one vital ingredient: the role that entrepreneurs play. Jump-starting growth in the developing world will require an understanding of the American entrepreneurial system, which involves four sectors of the economy. 500-WORD PREVIEW

China's Hidden Democratic Legacy

Orville Schell

China is finding it ever more difficult to straddle the divide between its anachronistic political system and its booming market economy. A reconsideration of the country's political future must come soon. Fortunately, China can find guidance in its own history: a previous generation of reformers who sought to balance the imperatives of modernity with the best aspects of Chinese tradition. 500-WORD PREVIEW

BOOK REVIEWS

Berlin to Baghdad: The Pitfalls of Hiring Enemy Intelligence

Timothy Naftali

Washington wants to hire ex-Baathists to help rebuild Iraq. The CIA's experience using ex-Nazis to run West Germany's intelligence service should give it pause. FULL TEXT

First Principals

Walter Russell Mead

Ron Chernow's new biography examines Alexander Hamilton's role in the founding of the American republic and his contribution to its conflictual political culture. FULL TEXT

The Unsettled West

Joshua Kurlantzick

Three new books detail Xinjiang's long history of oppression. As they show, Beijing's rule there has always been harsh -- but never so bad as in the last few years. FULL TEXT

The Fire Last Time

Scott Snyder

Going Critical offers an insiders' view of the deal struck with North Korea in 1994 and a core lesson for the Bush administration: there's no substitute for negotiation. FULL TEXT


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Foreign Affairs
Bestsellers
For May 2004

The topselling books on international affairs based on national sales at Barnes & Noble stores and barnesandnoble.com during May 2004.

1. Plan of Attack by Bob Woodward

2. Against All Enemies by Richard A. Clarke

3. House of Bush, House of Saud by Craig Unger

Complete list

The Year in Books

Stanley Hoffmann / Western Europe

Each month a member of our panel of book reviewers recommends the best books discussed in Foreign Affairs in the past year. For June 2004, Stanley Hoffmann gives his picks for the best books on Western Europe. Read

Most Popular Online Reprints

For May 2004

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

2. The Global Baby Bust by Phillip Longman (May/June 2004)

3. Flight From Freedom: What Russians Think and Want by Richard Pipes (May/June 2004)

4. Afghanistan Unbound by Kathy Gannon (May/June 2004)

5. The Payoff From Women's Rights by Isobel Coleman (May/June 2004)

6. The Decline of America's Soft Power by Joseph S. Nye, Jr. (May/June 2004)

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

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

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

10. Foreign Economic Policy for the Next President by C. Fred Bergsten (March/April 2004)

 

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