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INTERVIEW: Medvedev Trying to Carve Out New Role as President to Help Modernize Nation
July 2, 2008

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July 1, 2008

BACKGROUNDER: Food Prices
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A Roundtable
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Author Page - MADELEINE K ALBRIGHT

Recent Foreign Affairs articles:

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Bridges, Bombs, or Bluster?
Madeleine K. Albright
September/October 2003
Summary: Since the attacks of September 11, 2001, the Bush administration has pressured every country in the world to make a simple choice: Are you with the United States or with the terrorists? But by casting the choice so starkly--and expanding the war on terror to include its campaign in Iraq--Washington has alienated many natural and potential allies and made the fight against al Qaeda more difficult. It didn't have to be this way. The White House has acted as if it doesn't care what others think, and the country is paying the price for its mistake.
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The Testing of American Foreign Policy
Madeleine K. Albright
November/December 1998
Summary: After the Cold War, the demands on American leadership are no less stern than they were in Dean Acheson's day. Present again at the creation, U.S. diplomacy must pass a series of tests -- of vision, pragmatism, spine, and principle -- to build a foundation for a new world. This will mean encouraging democracy, stopping the spread of weapons of mass destruction, working to shore up the international financial system, engaging Beijing, and standing up to Baghdad and Belgrade. But America needs resources to lead, and Congress has foreign policy living hand-to-mouth. America cannot afford to abdicate its world role.
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