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Keyword: nationbuilding

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  • Bush opens Iraq strategy overhaul

    06/12/2006 7:02:57 PM PDT · by Democracy In Iraq · 9 replies · 269+ views
    Bush opens Iraq strategy overhaul by Olivier Knox 1 hour, 40 minutes ago CAMP DAVID, United States (AFP) - US President George W. Bush said talk of a US withdrawal from Iraq was premature but placed new leaders in Baghdad squarely in charge of ultimately pacifying their country. ...snip... "The best way to win this war against an insurgency is to stand up a unity government which is capable of defending itself but also providing tangible benefits to the people," he said at the Camp David retreat in Maryland. ...snip... Bush also urged Iraq's neighbors and the international community to...
  • Max Borders: Nation-Building or Gene-Splicing?

    06/01/2006 12:13:25 PM PDT · by Tolik · 10 replies · 1,537+ views
    TCSDaily.com ^ | June 1, 2006 | Max Borders
    Perhaps the key to nation-building is not to "build" a nation at all, but allow it to emerge spontaneously from vital institutions. But can institutions be transplanted? With the formation of the new Iraqi government, it's a good time to take stock -- not just of the current situation, but of the very idea of nation building. Many people who read this publication are familiar with the concept known as spontaneous order. The economist Friedrich Hayek pointed out it's the kind of economic and social order that emerges without central planning. Indeed, such order cannot be planned because it is...
  • Soldiers of Fortune

    11/20/2005 8:59:50 AM PST · by Valin · 7 replies · 916+ views
    Commentary ^ | Gabriel Schoenfeld
    Imperial Grunts: The American Military on the Ground by Robert D. Kaplan Random House. 421 pp. $27.95 Reviewed by Gabriel Schoenfeld Is America an empire, and, if so, is that a good or a bad thing, either for the U.S. or for the world? This question has been kicked around in recent years by polemicists from Noam Chomsky on the far fringe Left to Patrick Buchanan on the rabid Right and, more reflectively, by numerous scholars and intellectuals nearer the center. As the title of his new book suggests, Robert D. Kaplan is among those who believe America is indeed...
  • The Mayor of Ar Rutbah

    11/11/2005 8:33:44 AM PST · by Valin · 5 replies · 228+ views
    Foreign Policy ^ | November/December 2005 | James A. Gavrilis
    Amid the chaos in Iraq, one company of U.S. Special Forces achieved what others have not: a functioning democracy. How? By relying on common sense, the trust of Iraqis, and recollections from Political Science 101. Now, their commander reveals the gritty reality about nation-building in Iraq, from the ground up. As our long column of tan trucks rode down Iraq’s Business Highway 10 at 6 o’clock in the morning on April 9, 2003, I focused on my instincts and battle training, keeping an open mind and preparing for whatever lay ahead. After three weeks of intense firefights, the Fedayeen Saddam...
  • Is Mexico still a nation?

    08/24/2005 2:21:59 AM PDT · by Cincinatus' Wife · 61 replies · 1,201+ views
    Christian Science Monitor ^ | August 24, 2005
    A survey released last week by the Pew Hispanic Center found more than four in 10 Mexicans are willing to leave their country to live in the US. One in five would risk a dangerous, illegal border crossing. Most surprising, one in three college graduates wants to flee. Before Washington takes up immigration reform this fall, it needs to take a hard look at Mexico's disillusionment. Already, one in eight adults born in Mexico now lives in the US. And the Mexican economy is kept afloat partially by an estimated $16 billion sent back by immigrants to relatives. Such numbers...
  • Islam Dominates Iraq's Draft Constitution

    07/27/2005 1:03:11 PM PDT · by churchillbuff · 87 replies · 1,423+ views
    yahoo/ap ^ | July 27 05 | yahoo/ap
    Framers of Iraq's constitution will designate Islam as the main source of legislation — a departure from the model set down by U.S. authorities during the occupation — according to a draft published Tuesday. The draft states no law will be approved that contradicts "the rules of Islam" — a requirement that could affect women's rights and set Iraq on a course far different from the one envisioned when U.S.-led forces invaded in 2003 to topple Saddam Hussein. "Islam is the official religion of the state and is the main source of legislation," reads the draft published in the government...
  • Nation Building, after All

    04/19/2005 7:53:10 AM PDT · by Valin · 7 replies · 266+ views
    American Enterprise Institute ^ | 4/4/05 | Thomas Donnelly / Vance Serchuk
    GHAZNI, ARGHANISTAN--The line of army humvees stood motionless, engines running, waiting for the order to roll forward. Behind the convoy, concrete barriers and loops of concertina wire marked the edge of a U.S. firebase--a collection of plywood shacks, canvas tents, and shipping containers clustered around a long rectangular building that was once a Taliban madrassa. Ahead, a faint path of crushed snow snaked its way to the asphalt of the ring road--90 miles to Kabul on the right, 215 miles to Kandahar on the left, and a vast expanse of ice in every other direction. Welcome to Ghazni, Afghanistan's eighth...
  • Democracy for Everyone?

    01/29/2005 6:01:03 PM PST · by luciuscrassus · 18 replies · 482+ views
    Democracy for Everyone? High-violence societies may not be ready for representative government. by James L. Payne Do we know what it takes to implant democracy in a foreign land? For over a century now, the United States has been sending troops into troubled countries and trying to establish free and stable governments. While the results have not always been disappointing, the track record overall is not good. The results of our first effort, the 1898 intervention in Cuba, are typical. Following the Spanish-American War, the U.S. administered Cuba for four years, turning power over to an elected Cuban president in...
  • THE ELCTORATE Many Iraqis to cast vote in the U.S.

    01/13/2005 5:01:33 AM PST · by gimmebackmyconstitution · 8 replies · 475+ views
    New York Times ^ | January 13, 2005 | Steven R. Weisman
    January 13, 2005 THE ELECTORATE Many Iraqis to Cast Votes in U.S. By STEVEN R. WEISMAN WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 - Bush administration officials said Wednesday that an estimated 240,000 people living in the United States will be eligible to cast ballots in the coming election in Iraq, by voting in five American cities later this month. Citing figures compiled by the International Organization for Migration, an independent body that works closely with the United Nations, administration officials said that perhaps a million Iraqis over the age of 18 living in a total of 14 countries outside Iraq will be able...
  • Squirrel expert pays ex-weapons scientists to resist temptation

    01/12/2005 2:22:24 PM PST · by Willie Green · 7 replies · 434+ views
    Casa Grande Valley Newspapers ^ | January 11, 2005 | JOSEPH B. VERRENGIA, AP Science Writer
    For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use. In the Baghdad night, awakened by the rumble of car bombs and the thump-thump of attack helicopters, Peter Smallwood lies in a sandbagged trailer counting his trees. In his mind's forest, the University of Richmond ecologist zigzags through a dark maze of Appalachian hardwoods until he finds specific specimens, unmarked among thousands. His favorite tree back home in Virginia is a majestic white oak that sprouted before Thomas Jefferson was president. Somehow it escaped the logger's blade. Now it soars 100 feet into the sky; one slice off its thick, scaly...
  • Modern Vietnam is proof U.S. might can't remake nations (Quagmire Alert)

    08/03/2004 7:17:43 AM PDT · by presidio9 · 30 replies · 795+ views
    San Jose Mercury News ^ | 8/3/2004 | Daniel Sneider
    <p>IMAGES of the Vietnam War seem to be flooding into our lives lately. Footage of a young naval Lt. John Kerry, in fatigues, carrying an M-16, patrolling the Mekong Delta. President Bush, in an eerie echo of a previous president from Texas, vowing never to retreat in the face of aggression. Yet sitting recently in the Cafe Au Lac on a tree-lined street in Hanoi's old quarter, opposite the elegantly restored French- era Hotel Metropole, it was hard to remember why we fought that war.</p>
  • The nation-building lessons Washington has to learn

    06/29/2004 12:26:41 AM PDT · by ScaniaBoy · 2 replies · 132+ views
    Daily Telegraph ^ | 29 June 2004 | John Keegan
    Paul Bremer, the American head of Iraq's interim administration, has made his farewell. Two days earlier than was expected, he has left the country; Iyad Allawi becomes Prime Minister and Iraq regains its sovereignty. Up to a point. More than 100,000 foreign troops will remain on its soil to battle with the forces of disorder, and the Iraqi treasury will depend on funds voted for by the American Congress to finance the work of reconstruction following last year's war, several wars before that and decades of maladministration by Saddam Hussein. The anti-war coalition, which now includes the whole of the...
  • Temporary Doves. Why are the architects of Kosovo so down on Gulf War II?

    05/17/2004 9:26:02 AM PDT · by .cnI redruM · 25 replies · 238+ views
    Reason Magazine ^ | 17 May 2004 | Matt Welch
    Madam Secretary: A Memoir, by Madeleine Albright with Bill Woodward, New York: Miramax Books, 562 pages The Bubble of American Supremacy: Correcting the Misuse of American Power, by George Soros, New York: Public Affairs, 207 pages Winning Modern Wars: Iraq, Terrorism, and the American Empire, by Wesley K. Clark, New York: Public Affairs, 218 pages Of all the historical precedents that paved the way for President George W. Bush’s war against Iraq, the most directly relevant was Bill Clinton’s 1999 bombing of the rump Yugoslavia. Like Gulf War II, the 78-day NATO air campaign in Kosovo was waged without the...
  • Chinese Contractors Flex Lean Muscles in Sudan

    04/16/2004 3:30:15 AM PDT · by snopercod · 2 replies · 152+ views
    Engineering News Record ^ | April 14, 2004 | Peter Reina
    Chinese workers are flowing into Sudan for what is claimed to be the biggest international project secured by contractors from China. Growing familiarity with conditions in Sudan and more modest expectations for pay and profit seem to have been influential in the Chinese winning the $650-million civil contract for the Nile River's Merowe Dam, over 300 kilometers downstream of Khartoum. Since winning the contract last June from the Ministry of Irrigation and Water Resources, the CCMD Joint Venture has completed first stage river diversion. And it has begun excavation for the concrete section of the dam that will contain the...
  • Editorial: Out of sight ... World must not ignore horrors in Sudan; Ghosts of Rwanda - PBS FRontline

    03/30/2004 1:47:01 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 6 replies · 214+ views
    Sac Bee ^ | 3/30/04 | Op/Ed
    <p>Exactly 10 years ago the world stood by as a genocidal rampage by ethnic Hutus against ethnic Tutsis in Rwanda claimed as many as 800,000 lives. Now something similar may be unfolding in western Sudan, a region even more remote from the world's gaze. Will humanity bestir itself to act, or will history repeat itself?</p>
  • NATO Beefs Up Forces in Kosovo After 17 Die in Ethnic Riots

    03/18/2004 10:46:06 AM PST · by Calpernia · 18 replies · 303+ views
    American Forces Press Service ^ | March 18, 2004 | By Jim Garamone
    Seventeen Kosovars have been killed in the worst outbreak of ethnic violence in that province since NATO forces arrived in 1999, NATO officials said. A company of U.S. soldiers now assigned to the stabilization force in Bosnia is moving to Kosovo to beef up NATO forces in the area. Another two companies are standing by, said a NATO spokesman. Six people were killed in Mitrovica, three in Lipljan, three in Caglavica, two in Urosevac, one in Pec, one in Gnjilane and one in the Kosovar capital of Pristina. The rioting reportedly began in Mitrovica, when ethnic Albanians gathered to protest...
  • Soldiers injured in Kosovo unrest

    03/18/2004 6:08:13 AM PST · by Eurotwit · 2 replies · 182+ views
    Aftenposten ^ | 18 Mar, 10:31 (GMT+1) | Nina Berglund/AP
    Norwegian soldiers serving with NATO peacekeeping forces in Kosovo were among those injured in one of the bloodiest days of unrest since the end of the Kosovo war in 1999. Twenty Norwegians were hurt in rioting and violence that left at least 10 dead and hundreds injured. Fighting broke out in every major city in the province between Serbs and Albanians. Ethnic Albanians blamed Serbs for the drownings of two children, and set Serb homes, churches and cars on fire. Norwegian soldiers took part in the fighting Wednesday night. Officer Nils Hanheide told Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK) that one local man...
  • Logic of Empire

    03/11/2004 12:09:27 PM PST · by neverdem · 12 replies · 213+ views
    Reason ^ | Mar 11, 2004 | Brian Doherty
    Running the Planet: Not just a job, but an (endless) adventure Many potential new wars are in play among the neoimperialist foreign policy glitterati, still flying high after the Iraq invasion. It wasn't an obvious and immediate national or international tragedy—after all, the world didn't end, did it? No WMDs were unleashed on our troops or American cities. Because, well, there weren't any, even though the danger (but not, mind you, the "imminent" danger!) they posed was the major excuse for the war in the first place. But, hey, look what it did to Qaddafi, the essential post hoc justification...
  • Officer from fort helping build new Iraqi army

    03/02/2004 5:35:12 PM PST · by SandRat · 1 replies · 108+ views
    BAGHDAD - The creation of a new Iraqi military that will defend, not oppress, Iraqi citizens is under way. Many young men are coming forward to train and become part of what will be a 27 battalion, nine brigade, three division Iraqi Army of 45,000 soldiers, said Lt. Col. Damian Heaney, who was deployed from Fort Huachuca last year. Women eventually will be recruited, too. There also will be a small Iraqi Air Corps of about 1,000 people and a six-boat Navy being called the Iraqi Coastal Force, which will have about 1,000 sailors. The developing Iraqi Army will be...
  • Wesley Pruden: A voodoo venture in nation-building

    03/01/2004 10:04:54 PM PST · by JohnHuang2 · 4 replies · 116+ views
    Washington Times ^ | Tuesday, March 2, 2004 | By Wesley Pruden
    <p>Here we go again. The Marines should sign an annual contract with United Air Lines to ferry troops to Port-au-Prince and collect the frequent-flier miles.</p> <p>It's difficult to argue with the proposition that the United States has a humanitarian responsibility to stop the killing and man's inhumanity to man, which was long ago raised to an art form in Haiti, but we should be under no illusion that the latest Marine expedition to the miserable island of Hispaniola will accomplish lasting good.</p>