Corona virus outbreak. And reunited after 32 years a mothers fight to find his son who was abducted as a toddler. And sport the n. F. L. Owners back a rule change designed to increase diversity in the league teams will now have to interview at least 2 minority candidates for head coaching position. A powerful fighter and has slammed ashore in eastern india and bangladesh cyclon open as the regions fiercest storm ever recorded that we can slightly at how do winds of up to 170 kilometers when it began to make landfall hundreds of thousands of people have sought shelter in india and there have been reports of injuries and a 2 month old baby has already died while neighboring bangladesh has also reported its 1st death after a volunteer drowned when a boat filled with evacuees capsized the government is attempting to get millions of people to imagine seashells is 1200000 range refugees and coxs bazaar have also been asked. Stay indoors until the cyclon passes well tanveer chattery is standi
Serving. Watch booktv this weekend on cspan2. So welcome. The scheduling of this book and panel is certainly timely given the rising crisis with iran. Look into that subject eventually, but the point of the book, entitled seven pillars, and the discussion is to look more broadly and more deeply at the drivers of instability in the middle east. From yemen to syria to iraq, and now with iran, the region more than ever seems in a permanent state of turmoil. Its become a land of endless wars. Tragically, despite decades of intense and often wellmeaning american attention and the expenditure billions of dollars, u. S. Policy has more often than not been a failure. Maybe the caveat more often than not is, its been absolute failure, if one accepts the basic aim was to foster stability and better life for the people of the region. Of course the ones ultimately responsible for a countries success or failure of the people who live there, but the catastrophe in todays middle east raises questions
More than ever seems in a permanent state of turmoil and its become and land of endless wars. Despite decades of intense and often wellmeaning american attention. U. S. Policy had more often than not been a failure. More often than not is too kind. If one accepts that the basic aim was to foster stability and a better life for the people of the region. Of course the ones ultimately responsible ot of questions about whether the United States should continue to be engaged in the region and if so, how. In this regard, the editors of seven pillars, Michael Rubin and Brian Katulis and their co contributors have given a gift. They identify seven factors that affect stability or not and examine what they mean and the role they play. The pillars that they identify art is long gone era ideology by the military, education, economy and governance. Ive found many of the authors perspectives to be unique and to begin looking at al old problemn new ways whether it serves as the basis for a bipartisa
Welcome. The scheduling of this book and panel is certainly timely given the rising crisis with iran. We will get to that subject eventually, but the book entitled seven pillars and the discussion is to look more broadly and deeply at the drivers of instability of the middle east. From yemen to syria to iraq and now with iran, the region more than ever seems in a permanent state of turmoil if we cant become a land of before and tragically despite decades of intense and often wellmeaning intentions into the expenditure of billions of dollars, u. S. Policy has more often than not been a failure. Maybe the caveat more often than not is too kind. Its been an absolute failure if one accepts it was a better life for the people of the region. Of course the ones ultimately responsible for the success or failure are the people who live there. But the catastrophe of todays middle east raises a lot of questions about whether the United States should continue to be engaged in the region and if so,
Tragically despite decades of intense and often wellmeaning intentions into the expenditure of billions of dollars, u. S. Policy has more often than not been a failure. Maybe the caveat more often than not is too kind. Its been an absolute failure if one accepts it was a better life for the people of the region. Of course the ones ultimately responsible for the success or failure are the people who live there. But the catastrophe of todays middle east raises a lot of questions about whether the United States should continue to be engaged in the region and if so, how. In this regard, the editors of seven pillars, Michael Rubin and Brian Katulis and their co contributors have given a gift. They identify seven factors that affect stability or not and examine what they mean and the role they play. The pillars that they identify art is long gone era ideology by the military, education, economy and governance. Ive found many of the authors perspectives to be unique and to begin looking at al