By Eliot Brockner | Domestic Politics
Many Hondurans as well as outside observers of the country's political crisis breathed a sigh of relief when Profirio Lobo Sosa was sworn in as president on Jan. 27. The new Honduran government is now delicately engaging regional governments, while forging a new path that it hopes will lead the nation away from the debacle that characterized the nation's politics in the latter half of 2009.
Three to Watch: Davutoglu, Okada & Amorim
The men behind the foreign policies of three key powers.
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Strategic Posture Review: China
China is replete with contradictions that make the country simultaneously ...
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In Ukraine, Democracy's Main Woes Are Structural
By Andreas Umland -
Iraq's Oil Production Fuels Regional Tensions
By Andrea Bonzanni -
NATO's Baltic Defense Plans: Cold War Redux?
By Stephen Herzog -
Power Vacuum Leaves Nigeria on Life Support
By Lauren Gelfand -
Selling Weapons to Taiwan Was the Right Decision
By Michael S. Chase -
Reintegrating the Taliban
By Craig Davis
- Dead or Alive?
- Mexican President Felipe Calderon, Interviewed
- Argentina Seizes the Central Banks
- The Dechoukaj This Time
- Why the U.S. is Back on the Road to Damascus
- Iran’s President Moves Ahead on Uranium Processing
- Egypt's Copts Fearful Amid Increasing Tensions
- Will Yemen Rebels Accept a Fresh Cease-Fire Plan?
From the Editors
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By Thomas P.M. Barnett | Geography and Resources
As one of the "last in" on globalization's bandwagon, China has naturally become an aggressive integrator of frontier economies. Nowhere is this expansion more apparent, and controversial, than in sub-Saharan Africa, where Chinese foreign direct investment and trade have increased several-fold in the past half-decade. That has triggered rising strategic interest in a region long-ignored by the West.
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