- Zionism and Racism, Again: Durban II U.S. participation in the United Nation’s Durban Review Conference on Racism, otherwise known as Durban II, would have been a fool’s errand. Spring 2009 (Full article)
- Case Closed: A Prosecutor Without Borders Six years after Luis Moreno Ocampo became Prosecutor of the ICC, the priceless human capital invested in his office is draining away. Spring 2009 (Full)
- Dear Mr. President ... On Good and Evil P. J. O’Rourke ponders the president’s take on good and evil, and the limits of the olive branch. SPR 09 (Full)
- Drunken Nation: Russia’s Depopulation Bomb A specter is haunting Russia today. It is not the specter of Communism—that ghost has been chained in the attic of the past—but rather of depopulation. Spring 2009 (Full)
- Freedom’s Untidy: Democracy Promotion and Its Discontents The scale of the catastrophe in Iraq not only invites a long, hard stare at the wreckage but ignites the question of what to conclude. SPR 2009 (full)
- Lessons Lost: The Futility of Experience Spring 2009 (Abstract)
- Letter from the Editor: Spring 2009 Members of the Obama team have suggested, even offers proof that hitherto intractable dilemmas of politics and ideology have been resolved. I’m not so sure. What makes them? (Full Text)
- Life On Venus: Europe’s Last Man Is it true that Western Europeans, after half a century of peace and prosperity, suffer from the kind of moral malaise that Nietzsche warned about, and that Fukuyama and Kagan diagnosed? Spring 2009 (Full)
- Not So Huddled Masses: Multiculturalism and Foreign Policy Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, America has entered a new era of ethnicity and foreign policy, whose contours are only just now emerging. Full Spring 2009
- Tarnished Brass: Is the U.S. Military Profession in Decline? Quietly, fitfully, but progressively, American military professionalism is eroding, argues Richard H. Kohn, the nation’s preeminent scholar of civil-military relations. Spring 2009 (Full)
- Turkish Delight: A Sour Delicacy Turkey poses particular problems for the foreigner attempting to make sense of it. Istanbul, especially, appears to be quite Western, and in many ways it is. This seduces the observer into thinking it is more intelligible than it is. Spring 2009 (Full)
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