CIAO DATE: 05/2008
Volume: 14, Issue: 0
Spring 2008
Download Full Journal (PDF)
From the Publisher (PDF)
Tom Neumann
Editor's Corner (PDF)
Ilan Berman
The Battle for Our Common Future (PDF)
Michael Chertoff
The stakes behind the West's current struggle
Stumbling Toward Eurabia (PDF)
Alex Alexiev
Barbarians inside the European gates.
Is the Special Relationship Still Special? (PDF)
Sally McNamara
Europe, the new challenge to U.S.-UK tiesTurning the Page (PDF)
Astrid Coeurderoy
Nicholas Sarkozy closes the book on the anti-American era in France.
Berlin's Best Hope (PDF)
Ulf Gartzke
Angela Merkel holds the key to a more constructive German foreign policy
Europe's Rising East (PDF)
Janusz Bugajski
Eastern Europe and the Balkans between East and WestEscaping Gazprom's Embrace (PDF)
Borut Grgic, Alexandros Petersen
For Europe, real energy security means rolling back Russian influence—and focusing on the Caspian
The Case for European Missile Defense (PDF)
Peter Brookes
Why missile defense cooperation with Europe matters
Russia's "Nuclear Renaissance" (PDF)
Victor Mizin
Back to nuclear basics between Moscow and Washington
Facing the Future (PDF)
Jamie Shea
The Atlantic Alliance needs to adapt to new security threats
An Obsolete Alliance (PDF)
E. Wayne Merry
NATO has long outlived its usefulness to America"Tough Choices Ahead": An Interview with J. D. Crouch II (PDF)
J. D. Crouch II
The former Deputy National Security Advisor explains the centrality of the "third site," Russia's resurgence, and U.S. policy toward Iran
NEW DELHI: The Politics of Nuclear Cooperation (PDF)
C. Uday Bhaskar
LONDON: Downing Street Blues (PDF)
Michael Gove
BAGHDAD: Winds of Change (PDF)
Joel D. Rayburn
Looking Back to Look Forward (PDF)
Asaf Romirowsky
From Michael Oren, a masterful exposé of America’s experience with the Middle East
Turf War (PDF)
Ilan Berman
Vali Nasr's partisan look inside the Shia-Sunni schism
Tracking the Dragon (PDF)
Randall G. Schriver
Eisenman et al. bring us closer to understanding China's changing foreign policy
Expecting the Unexpected (PDF)
Adam Lovinger
A framework for addressing unforeseen catastrophes, courtesy of Fukuyama and company