サクサク読めて、アプリ限定の機能も多数!
トップへ戻る
ドラクエ3
www.foreignpolicy.com
It's not as crazy as you think-- and here's how the United States and Japan can prevent it from happening. BY James Holmes James Holmes is professor of strategy at the Naval War College. He recently lectured on island-defense strategy at the Japan Foreign Ministry and JMSDF Staff College. The views voiced here are his alone. APRIL 8, 2014 In a speech in Tokyo on April 6, U.S. Defense Secretary Ch
Was the security lapse at the U.S. embassy in Sanaa a move by Yemen's former president to show America who still calls the shots? SANAA, Yemen — As black smoke billowed into the sky above the U.S. embassy in Sanaa on Thursday, Sept. 13, demonstrators hacked at the thick glass windows of the security office entrance with pick axes. To the cry of "Death to America!" the angry mob burned an American
Syria's Ground Zero The city of Homs is bearing the brunt of Bashar al-Assad's bloody crackdown. FEBRUARY 6, 2012 In the 11 months of President Bashar al-Assad's bloody crackdown in Syria, the assault on Homs has been the bloodiest. This western Syrian city of roughly 1 million people, close to the border with Lebanon, has been a flashpoint of the Syrian revolt. Residents of Homs have taken to the
Foreign Policy presents a unique portrait of 2011's global marketplace of ideas and the thinkers who make them. "Enough, enough, enough." With those words at the U.N. General Assembly, Mahmoud Abbas finally stepped out of Yasir Arafat's shadow and began to build his own legacy as a Palestinian nationalist. Abbas, who has guided the Palestinian Authority through nearly seven post-Arafat years, took
There's a reason they brought one to get Osama bin Laden. BY REBECCA FRANKEL | MAY 4, 2011 Dogs have been fighting alongside U.S. soldiers for more than 100 years, seeing combat in the Civil War and World War I. But their service was informal; only in 1942 were canines officially inducted into the U.S. Army. Today, they're a central part of U.S. efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan -- as of early 2010
From the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood to the Arab autocracy domino theory, five myths about Egypt's revolution. "Facebook Defeated Mubarak." No. There's a joke that has been making the rounds in Egypt in recent weeks, and it goes something like this: Hosni Mubarak meets Anwar Sadat and Gamal Abdel Nasser, two fellow Egyptian presidents, in the afterlife. Mubarak asks Nasser how he ended up there
China's teetering on the verge of its own lost decade, and a meltdown in Beijing would make Japan's economic malaise look like child's play. BY ETHAN DEVINE | SEPTEMBER 30, 2010 This year, China overtook Japan as the world's second-largest economy, a shift in the global pecking order that surprised nobody who has been paying attention for the past 20 years. What was truly surprising is that Japan
Where is sex safer: sub-Saharan Africa or Scandinavia? According to the world’s largest sex survey, whether you have unprotected sex isn’t a matter of being male or female, gay or straight. When it comes to risky bedroom behavior, what matters most may be where you live.
このページを最初にブックマークしてみませんか?
『Foreign Policy』の新着エントリーを見る
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く