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8 December 2017
America Can't Win the Drug War in Afghanistan
The Achilles Heel of China's Air Force
By Robert Farley
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The Coming Conflict Between China and Japan
It is easy to forget that as recently as the 19th century, China and Japan were provincial backwaters. So self-absorbed and technologically primitive were East Asia’s great powers that German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel said, “The extensive tract of eastern Asia is severed from the process of general historical development.” His description seems laughable today. China and Japan are now the second- and third-largest economies in the world. Japan’s failed quest for regional domination during World War II and its subsequent economic reconstruction profoundly affected the world. China’s unification under communism and its pursuit of regional power in the past decade have been no less significant.
The Achilles Heel of China's Air Force
By Robert Farley
The Achilles Heel of China’s Air Force (PLAAF) has long been its lack of practical experience, both in combat and in deployments distant from Chinese borders. For the time being, a concentration on regional defense has served the PLAAF well. But as China’s interests and responsibilities grow, the air force may need to spin up the capabilities necessary to send its people and aircraft far away, for a long time.
Saleh and the War in Yemen
By Anthony Cordesman
Few are likely to mourn the assassination of Yemen's former dictator, Ali Abdullah Saleh. His rule over Yemen presided over decades of failure to deal with his country's desperate levels of poverty and its steadily growing problems with overpopulation, a lack of water, and a dependence on Qat—a drug so unrewarding that the only country that would import it was the even poorer nation of Somalia.
North Korea boats off Japan spark spy scare; but some suspect just luckless fishermen
An increasing number of fishing boats from North Korea has been appearing off Japan - some in distress, some abandoned and some with dead bodies on board - raising fears about infiltration by spies as tension with North Korea surges. The coastguard has beefed up patrols in response to the boats - including one labeled military property - just off the coast, or even grounded on Japanese beaches. The coastguard and analysts of North Korea have played down the fears, attributing the surge in boats to more mundane reasons, such as a North Korean drive to increase winter fish catches.
But the worries persist.
How to Save Trump's State Department
Pentagon Acknowledges 2,000 Troops in Syria
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Trump Just Sabotaged His Own Peace Process
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Why America Must Learn to Live with North Korea's Nukes
Yu-Hua Chen
Is America Headed toward War with North Korea?
The Global Oil War Rages On With OPEC Cut Deal Extension
By Catherine Putz
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Countering Russian Information Operations in the Age of Social Media
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Vladimir Putin Isn’t as Russian as He Seems
![](https://foreignpolicymag.files.wordpress.com/2017/12/gettyimages-466585604-1.jpg?w=1500&h=1000&crop=0,0,0,0)
How “Cyber” Sidelined “Development” at the ITU’s World Telecommunication Development Conference
Samantha Dickinson
![](https://www.cfr.org/sites/default/files/styles/article_header_l_16x9_600px/public/image/2017/11/37798982181_5bf2613fa0_o.jpg?itok=JVpdQOjE)
WHEN ROUTINE ISN’T ENOUGH: WHY MILITARY CYBER COMMANDS NEED HUMAN CREATIVITY
MAX SMEETS
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How to Save (Or Destroy) the Royal Navy
James Holmes
Deja Vu All Over Again: US Military Toying With the Already Tried-and-Failed Idea of Setting Up Another Pro-Afghan Government Militia to Fight Taliban
Suzanne Schmeidl
For long-time observers of Afghanistan, déjà vu happens with such frequency that one feels trapped in a never-ending farcical nightmare. This is why news of a mid-September visit to India by a joint US-Afghan military delegation to see whether the model of the Indian Territorial Army could work in Afghanistan was met with horror and disbelief. Surely standing up yet another militia was not being seriously considered? Afghanistan already has, and has had, several versions of such a force to support the struggling Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF), among them the Afghan Local Police created in 2010 by US Special Forces after toying with several prototypes since 2005, and the more recent ‘National Uprising Groups’ set up in 2015 by Afghanistan’s National Directorate for Security (NDS). The mandate of the proposed new force seems identical to these groups: to provide security in areas where the ANSF has not managed to do so.
Why the AK-47 is the World's Most Feared Firearm (75 Million Guns in Nearly 100 Nations)
Blake Franko
The Army's plan to stop soldiers from staring at their tablets
By: Mark Pomerleau
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The US Army Knows It’s Vulnerable to Space Attack. Here’s What They Want to Do About It
BY CAROLINE HOUCK
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