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1. Domestic Constraints on South Korean Foreign Policy

2. Managing Global Disorder: Prospects for Transatlantic Cooperation

3. Economic Constraints on Russian Foreign Policy

4. Revising U.S. Grand Strategy Toward China

5. Enhancing U.S. Support for Peace Operations in Africa

6. Reorienting U.S. Pakistan Strategy: From Af-Pak to Asia

7. Afghanistan After the Drawdown

8. The Case for International Law

9. Ending Child Marriage: How Elevating the Status of Girls Advances U.S. Foreign Policy Objectives

10. Democratic Internationalism: An American Grand Strategy for a Post-exceptionalist Era

11. U.S.-Turkey Relations: A New Partnership

12. What It Will Take to Secure Afghanistan

13. Why Moscow Say No

14. Letter to the Editor: The Case for Treatment

15. The Tea Party and American Foreign Policy

16. The Advantages of an Assertive China

17. China's Search for a Grand Strategy

18. After bin Laden: What's Next for Obama

19. Next Steps for Pakistan Strategy

20. Crisis in the Congo: CPA Contingency Planning

21. Family Planning and U.S. Foreign Policy: Ensuring U.S. Leadership for Healthy Families and Communities and Prosperous, Stable Societies

22. Managing Instability on China's Periphery

23. September 11 in Retrospect

24. The Wisdom of Retrenchment: America Must Cut Back to Move Forward

25. Humanitarian Intervention Comes of Age

26. Saudi Arabia in the New Middle East

27. The Russian Economic Crisis

28. Overpowered?

29. U.S. Policy Toward the Korean Peninsula

30. State of the Union Address, 2010

31. From Hope to Audacity

32. A Conversation with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton

33. A Conversation with Benjamin Netanyahu

34. Toward Deeper Reductions in U.S. and Russian Nuclear Weapons

35. U.S. Strategy for Pakistan and Afghanistan

36. Congress and National Security

37. A New Global Player

38. U.S. Nuclear Weapons Policy

39. Obama's Address to the Nation on the Way Forward in Afghanistan and Pakistan, December 2009

40. Intervention to Stop Genocide and Mass Atrocities: International Norms and U.S. Policy

41. Enhancing U.S. Preventive Action

42. Preparing for Sudden Change in North Korea

43. Averting Crisis in Ukraine

44. The Future of Foreign Assistance Amid Global Economic and Financial Crisis

45. The G-2 Mirage

46. Necessity, Choice, and Common Sense: A Policy for a Bewildering World

47. Diplomacy, Inc.: The Influence of Lobbies on U.S. Foreign Policy

48. Farm Futures: Bringing Agriculture Back to U.S. Foreign Policy

49. The Global Consequences of the Crisis, Session One in the Stephen C. Freidheim Symposium on Global Economics on Financial Turbulence and U.S. Power

50. From AfPak to PakAf: A Response to the New U.S. Strategy for South Asia

51. Reforming State

52. Logic, Not Lobbies

53. China, Space Weapons, and U.S. Security

54. Congo: Securing Peace, Sustaining Progress

55. Dealing with Damascus: Seeking a Greater Return on U.S.-Syria Relations

56. Fragility, Instability, and the Failure of States: Assessing Sources of Systemic Risk

57. Toward an Angola Strategy

58. U.S.-China Relations

59. Living with Hugo: U.S. Policy Toward Hugo Chávez's Venezuela

60. Generating Momentum for a New Era in U.S.-Turkey Relations

61. Peace in Papua: Widening a Window of Opportunity

62. Afghanistan's Uncertain Transition from Turmoil to Normalcy

63. Preventing Catastrophic Nuclear Terrorism

64. Challenges for a Postelection Mexico: Issues for U.S. Policy

65. Both Sides of the Aisle: A Call for Bipartisan Foreign Policy

66. Getting Serious about the Twin Deficits

67. In the Wake of War: Improving U.S. Post-Conflict Capabilities

68. Iran: Time for a New Approach

69. How Shareholder Reforms Can Pay Foreign Policy Dividends

70. China, Nuclear Weapons, and Arms Control: A Preliminary Assessment