By Michael Cecire | U.S. Foreign Policy
TBILISI, Georgia -- Since August 2008, when Russian tanks rolled into Georgian territory, Georgia has been let down by the very Western countries it considered to be its closest friends. Although the Georgian population continues to register overwhelming support for integration into Euro-Atlantic structures, there are now indications that the country's political elite might be losing patience.
Three to Watch: Davutoglu, Okada & Amorim
The men behind the foreign policies of three key powers.
more »
Strategic Posture Review: China
China is replete with contradictions that make the country simultaneously ...
more »
-
Internal and External Challenges Ahead for Honduras
By Eliot Brockner -
In Ukraine, Democracy's Main Woes Are Structural
By Andreas Umland -
Iraq's Oil Production Fuels Regional Tensions
By Andrea Bonzanni -
NATO's Baltic Defense Plans: Cold War Redux?
By Stephen Herzog -
Power Vacuum Leaves Nigeria on Life Support
By Lauren Gelfand -
Selling Weapons to Taiwan Was the Right Decision
By Michael S. Chase
- Ukraine's Democratic Evolution, On Hold For Now
- Yanukovych Won. Get Over It.
- Is the West Losing Georgia?
- Can Greece Outrun the Lion of Default?
- Analysis: Iranian Plan Will Put Nation a Step Closer to Having Material for Bomb
- Preparing for a Nuclear Iran
- Pakistani Military Retakes Key Town in Tribal Belt From Taliban
- In Northern Iraq, a Vote Seems Likely to Split
From the Editors
WPR has a new home page!
Our new home page is meant to better showcase the variety of content available to WPR readers and subscribers. We hope you like it. Among other things, we highlight more columns on the front page, and we have created a new "reports" section for HTML versions of our Strategic Posture Reviews and Special Reports.
Also, you may notice a new button to the right of the search box at the top of every page. Using this button, subscribers can search across the almost 40,000 articles that have been included in the Media Roundup since July 2006. If you're not a subscriber, you can try out the Media Roundup search, and get access to all our premium content and services, by signing up for a 30-day free trial.
By Richard Weitz | Defense and Military
At a Feb. 5 session of the Russian Security Council, President Dmitry Medvedev finally approved Russia's updated comprehensive military doctrine. But notwithstanding a lengthy period of discussion and consideration, and despite all the developments of the past decade, the latest version generally supports the same policies as the previous military doctrine adopted in 2000.
A representative from World Politics Review will contact you by e-mail to set up your free trial.








