Mack Brown Distinguished Professor for Global Leadership, History, and Public Policy at the University of Texas at Austin

Weekly Blog on Contemporary Politics and Foreign Policy

http://globalbrief.ca

A Certain Breed of Fascism: Containing Putin’s Russia

Alcalde Magazine (5 May 2014)

Intolerance, Boycotts, and the ASA

Academe Blog (20 December 2013)

Neutralizing North Korea

New York Times (13 April 2013)

Defending Democracy by Teaching History

Real Clear Politics, 18 January 2013

What Kind of History Should We Teach?

Alcalde Magazine, 9 January 2013

Academe Blog, 10 January 2013

The Crisis of Our Universities

CNN.com, 19 June 2012

Obama’s Strategic Retreat in Afghanistan

CNN.com, 2 May 2012

America’s Self-Defeating Cycle in Afghanistan

CNN.com, 12 March 2012

Is America Really an Empire?

Salon, 26 October 2011

America the Overcommitted

New York Times, 14 October 2011

Our Next Step in the Middle East

Daily Beast, 7 October 2011

How to Leave a Strong Afghanistan

CNN.com 27 September 2011

Obama’s Anti-Nuclear Vision After the Cold War

Aargauer Zeitung (Zurich, Switzerland) 10 April 2010
English Language Version: globalbrief.ca 12 April 2010

Where are the Kissingers for the 21st Century?

Toronto Globe and Mail (February 28, 2010)

Twenty Years Since the Fall of the Berlin Wall

From the Cold War to a “Common European Home”

Aargauer Zeitung (6 November 2009)

The Real History of the Korean War

Sixty years ago the defeat of Imperial Japan left the Korean peninsula divided into two antagonistic states one dominated by the Soviet Union, the other dominated by the United States. Both Korean states, and their foreign patrons, hoped to unite the nation behind their respective regimes. The devastating war of 1950-53 failed to fulfill this promise, prolonging the suffering and the division of the Korean people. To this day, Koreans grieve for their loss and long for unification.

Read this editorial in Korean, Japanese, and English at The Chosun Ilbo (October 18, 2005) …

A chance for Bush to salvage his foreign policy

…America’s long time adversary, Iran, similarly contends with a clash of generations and worldviews at home, as well as a cast of external challengers, including the International Atomic Energy Agency and the United Nations Security Council. Leaders in Washington and Tehran need one another. The White House should pursue a “China opening” with Iran. Although Kissinger’s insights from the Vietnam War have not helped in Iraq, his maneuvers with China do provide a model for navigating relations with Iran…

Read the full editorial at the Boston Globe (July 2007) …

This editorial also appeared in the New York Times, 24 July 2007…