More Analysis
Next January, the new U.S. President will be confronted with the longest list of severe challenges any president has faced in decades. Prioritizing among them will be even more important than usual. In its new series, "Foreign Policy for the Next President", the Carnegie Endowment’s experts endeavor to do just that. They separate good ideas from dead ends and go beyond widely agreed goals to describe how to achieve them.
In the second brief in this new series, Nathan Brown argues that the Bush administration is using its final months to try to gain agreement on a two-state solution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict—but much of the framework supporting a two-state solution has collapsed. In January 2009, a new American administration will face a series of bleak choices, of which a two-state solution remains the most attractive. It may still be possible to revive a two-state solution, but it will require the emergence of a more viable and unified Palestinian leadership. Rather than pretending that an agreement is possible now, it would be far better if U.S. efforts in the remainder of this calendar year began to address the underlying problems.
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North Korea's Nuclear Program
Last month, the U.S. administration released details of North Korea’s involvement in the construction of an alleged nuclear reactor in Syria. Robert Gallucci, the ambassador responsible for the 1994 Agreed Framework between North Korea and the United States, and Carl Ford, a former Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research, examine North Korea’s nuclear capabilities, Pyongyang’s connections and cooperation with Syria, and future steps towards verifying the disablement of North Korean nuclear facilities.
Arab Reform Bulletin
The May issue of the Arab Reform Bulletin features:
• Why Kuwaiti politics will keep boiling even after May 17 elections
• How blogs, Facebook, and You Tube are changing Egyptian politics
• Why the benefits of economic reform are not trickling down in Jordan and Egypt
• What Syria's new economic reform laws mean
• How educational reform initiatives in Gulf States differ
Plus developments from across the Middle East, debates in the Arab media, new publications, and much more.