Home > News > Should We Intervene in Syria? A Response to Anne-Marie Slaughter This is a guest post by former guest-blogger and University of Chicago political scientist Paul Staniland: ***** Anne-Marie Slaughter has a provocative op-ed in today’s New York Times calling for intervention in Syria. She argues that simply arming the opposition will trigger a proxy war. Instead, she advocates creating
Two men survey the damage in a law school in Zlitan, Libya, two days after it was hit in a NATO airstrike last month.Credit...Moises Saman for The New York Times Steven Erlanger is the Paris bureau chief of The New York Times. PARIS THE war in Libya may be one of those quietly telling moments in the history of more important nations. For the first time, the United States has taken a secondary role
The war on Libya has not gone well. Kim Sengupta's report on Wednesday detailed this starkly: "Fresh diplomatic efforts are under way to try to end Libya's bloody civil war, with the UN special envoy flying to Tripoli to hold talks after Britain followed France in accepting that Muammar Gaddafi cannot be bombed into exile. The change of stance by the two most active countries in the international
Samantha and Her Subjects Mini Teaser: The prophet armed, Samantha Power, has now drafted Obama into her crusade against mass slaughter. Liberal hawks and neocons, reunited. Make way for a profound foreign-policy transformation. HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION—the conviction that American presidents must act, preemptively if necessary, to avert the massacre of innocents abroad—is steadily acquiring a ne
BENGHAZI, Libya — As NATO struggles to break a deepening stalemate in Libya, the British announced on Tuesday that they were sending military advisers to help build up a rebel army that has stumbled against the superior forces of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi. The first question the British will face is “Whose army?” For they will find themselves advising a ragtag rebel force that cannot even agree on w
The civilian death toll has been high in Misrata, the rebels' last stronghold in western Libya Libya's foreign minister says a British plan to send a military team to advise rebels fighting Col Gaddafi would harm chances of peace in the country. A UK military presence in rebel-held Benghazi would "prolong" fighting, Abdul Ati al-Obeidi told the BBC. UK Foreign Secretary William Hague said the move
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