Hutch
A broken man on a Halifax pier, the last of Barret
I found it here
but maybe not...
The CSM can hardly be accussed of being radical left in it's views (but I'm sure I'll be disabused of that notion soon enough), but this seems to be the most "fair and balanced" treatment of the topic I've seen to date.
Comments?
WASHINGTON – Secretary of State Colin Powell is on a roll. In a kind of nose-thumbing at neoconservatives' "America first and alone" ideology, the Bush administration's leading protagonist of multilateralism is displaying the power of diplomacy over confrontation.
There he is in Sudan with United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, urging the Sudanese government to rein in militias and end a humanitarian crisis. Next, he's in Asia, conducting the highest-level meeting that's been held in two years with a North Korean official.
Such initiatives - following President Bush's own "month of summits" in June - have some observers speculating that the "neocons" and their black-and-white views of the world are on the outs in the White House.
but maybe not...
One writes the obituary of the neocons at one's own peril," says Chris Toensing, editor of the Middle East Report in Washington. Noting that "people make policy," Mr. Hulsman says that "if you look at the people staffing the administration, they have changed remarkably little given the debacle in Iraq." And he says the key to who has won the battle will emerge in the days after the November election, when one party is analyzing its loss as the other makes staffing decisions.
The CSM can hardly be accussed of being radical left in it's views (but I'm sure I'll be disabused of that notion soon enough), but this seems to be the most "fair and balanced" treatment of the topic I've seen to date.
Comments?