Robert Farley
Lacking anything better to blog about. . . I have recently found myself in the mood to purchase DVDs. This mood strikes a few times a year, and usually leaves.
A couple of interesting stories about Russian nuclear missiles have been making the rounds. As far as I can tell, the Russians are developing three new systems. One of these is.
Life with no government? "Somalia is a pure free market," one diplomat told me. Driving 50km (30 miles) from one of the airstrips near the capital, Mogadishu, to the city, you.
Yet remarkably funny, from Roger Ailes: [Brooks:] It's totally different. I always swore that I would never agree to be a columnist because it's like slavery. You've got to come up.
Bill, we hardly knew ya. . . William Safire, whose political commentary column has appeared on the Op-Ed Page of The New York Times for more than 30 years, is.
Oh, dear. Prominent Chinese American author Iris Chang, whose international bestseller "The Rape of Nanking" resurrected the long-ignored atrocities by the Japanese military on Chinese civilians during World War II, died.
Via the Washington Post: Agency officials have criticized the four former Capitol Hill staffers Goss brought with him for their inexperience. Goss' first choice for executive director — the agency's.
As Laura Rozen and Mark Goldberg point out, it looks as if the foreign policy hawks are starting to turn their attention back to China. This shouldn't be surprising, for a whole.