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z2004-03-17- Biden Democratic Foreign Policy
A strange game. The only winning move is .

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last edited by BillSeitz on Apr 15, 2008 8:18 am

[George Packer] on and the need of the to develop a . The two complementary tendencies that doomed his effort on Iraq have characterized Democrats since the war on terrorism began: on one side, the urge to take cover under Republican policies in order not to be labelled weak; on the other, a rigid opposition that invokes moral principle but often leads to the very results it seeks to prevent. Neither posture shows a willingness to grapple with the world as it is, to do the hard work of imagining a foreign policy for the post-September-11th () era... Nonetheless, for Democrats and for Americans, the first step is to realize that the war on terrorism () is actually a war for liberalism - a struggle to bring populations now living under tyrannies and failed states into the orbit of ... I asked [Thomas Carothers], an expert on democracy at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, to name one project that might help change the political culture of the Arab world. He mentioned a nonprofit group, the , that is working to spread the idea among Arab business associations that transparency () and the will attract foreign investment... The United States achieved this in during the late nineties - funding pro-democracy student groups that helped in the overthrow of the Milosevic dictatorship. It's possible for something of the kind to occur in Muslim countries. Government agencies and nonprofit groups could fund new organizations like the Iranian dissident 's democracy foundation, whose Web site will post a library of liberal ideas for young people in Iran to read behind the privacy of their computer screens.


 




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