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Kazakhstan and the United States: Twenty Years of Ambiguous Partnership
The Five Futures of Cyber Conflict and Cooperation
US Lessons for the Eurozone Restoring Confidence through Transparency
Prospects and Challenges for Increasing India-Pakistan Trade
A US-EU Action Plan for Supporting Democratization: Egypt, Libya, and Tunisia
Council News
Jonathan Paris Discusses Syrian Crisis with France 24
Jonathan Paris, nonresident senior fellow with the Atlantic Council's South Asia Center, appeared on France 24 to discuss Russia's support for the Assad regime and what it means for a possible UN resolution against Syria.
Damon Wilson US Senate Testimony: Ukraine at a Crossroads
On February 1, Atlantic Council executive vice president Damon Wilson testified at a hearing of the US Senate Committe on Foreign Relations on the topic: "Ukraine at a Crossroads: What's at Stake for the US and Europe?"
Michele Dunne on US-Egypt Relations for NPR's Morning Edition
Relations between the US and Egypt have taken a downturn since Egyptian authorities raided the offices of seventeen nongovernmental organizations in December - three of them US-funded. Michele Dunne, director of the Atlantic Council's Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East, spoke on NPR's Morning Edition about the situation and what it means for US aid to Egypt.
FEATURED ISSUE
The South Asia Center receives guidance and support from many experts throughout the world. Our senior fellows, guest-speakers, Center patrons, and visitors contribute heavily to the Center’s mission to “wage peace,” and engage the international community in the region. The Center asked our contributors the simple, but key question, “What you do expect in 2012?”
REGISTER
Hillary Clinton Hits BRIC Wall Over Iran Sanctions
James Joyner | March 11, 2010Secretary of State Hillary Clinton returned home from Brazil unable to secure cooperation on increased pressure against Iran's nuclear program. Nick Gvosdev says we shouldn't be surprised — and that the ramifications go far beyond this one vote.
Efforts to get a new stronger sanctions resolution are running against not only the expected resistance from China, but reluctance on the part of Turkey to endorse this approach. Meanwhile, India’s private sector shows no real enthusiasm for cutting off commercial relations with Tehran. Instead of showcasing the determination of the “international community,” the Obama administration is facing the reality of a divided world. Even if successful French diplomacy with Russia ameliorates Moscow’s opposition, the current drive for sanctions looks largely like a “Euro-Atlantic” initiative—and if so, it loses a good deal of its punch if half the world chooses to ignore them.
Gvosdev argues that what we're seeing is that there is no prospect for a "League of Democracies," as John McCain and others have advocated, because "the democracies of the advanced north and west" have very different values and priorities than "the democracies of the south and east." Most notably, the latter much more highly value state sovereignty and economic development and therefore resist the former's calls for humanitarian interventions, restrictions on commerce to achieve environmental goals, and pressures against the right of regimes to develop nuclear energy capabilities.
Moreover, he points out, the Obama administration has prioritized revamped relations with Russia and India but shown no especial interest in the other two BRICs, Brazil and India.
This is simply another in a seemingly endless series of object lessons that other countries have different interests. While seemingly axiomatic, American foreign policy seems almost always to be discussed as if people everywhere would naturally go along with our preferences if only we had a better public diplomacy program. Alas, the world doesn't work that way.
James Joyner is managing editor of the Atlantic Council. AP Photo.




























