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Diplomacy & Crisis News

Democrats Are Hypocrites on Corruption

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 22:22
Robert Menendez is credibly accused of serious crimes, but his party has never seemed to have a problem with him.

Cambodia Becomes the World’s Newest One-Party State

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 21:57
With Chinese support, Hun Sen has effectively destroyed all opposition to his autocratic rule.

How Jared Kushner’s Newspaper Became a Favorite Outlet for WikiLeaks Election Hacks

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 18:50
The New York Observer, owned by Trump’s son-in-law, was a friendly outlet for the 2016 Russian hackers.

I Spent 5 Hours With Jeff Sessions So You Didn’t Have To

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 18:32
Hillary Clinton doesn’t have to worry about a special prosecutor, and three other takeaways from the Attorney General’s latest Congressional testimony.

Israel Is Growing Increasingly Worried About the Trump Administration

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 17:11
As Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Russia rush to fill the vacuum of leadership in the Middle East, the United States is AWOL.

President Trump and the Risks of Nuclear War

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 16:37
How command and control works when the military wakes up the president vs. when the president wakes up the military.

Babylon Revisited: Melancholy Thoughts After a Short Trip to Washington, D.C.

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 15:30
As a young reporter in political Washington in the late 1980s, I noticed that there was a type of person who thrived in the driven, transactional environment of the capital.

SitRep: Pentagon Officials Open To Talks With North Korea

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 13:54
U.S. taking eye off South China Sea, Navy searching for way to 355 ships, Pentagon experimenting with new missile defenses

Navy Is Still Searching For A Plan To Reach A 355-Ship Fleet

Foreign Policy - Fri, 17/11/2017 - 12:29
It’s been over a year since Trump promised dozens more warships.

Russia Vetoes U.N. Effort to Finger Those Responsible for Syrian Chemical Weapons Attacks

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 23:19
Nikki Haley warns U.S. is prepared to use military to enforce prohibition on Syrian chemical weapons use.

Rational Security on The E.R.: The “DMs on the DL” Edition

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 23:12
Does democracy go down in the DMs? The folks at Lawfare discuss.

The Kurdish Explosion Is Unleashing Demons

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 22:22
The United States needs to put a stop to this flashpoint before it’s too late.

Why Cozying Up to Trump Works

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 21:58
The rest of the world may not particularly like the U.S. president’s bluster, but playing to his ego is a pretty good strategy.

Lawmakers Scold State Department for Reportedly Slashing Disability Support for Diplomats’ Children

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 20:53
Funds for therapy and education are reportedly cut.

Israel Isn’t Going to Fight Saudi Arabia’s Wars

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 20:17
Don't expect Benjamin Netanyahu to put Israeli soldiers in harm's way in Lebanon on Mohammed bin Salman's say-so.

Are China’s Chickens Contaminating America’s Plates?

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 19:36
Americans’ favorite meat just got riskier to eat.

With Trump Focused on North Korea, Beijing Sails Ahead in South China Sea

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 18:12
China is starting to dictate terms in one of the world’s strategic waterways, and the United States is largely missing in action.

Coffee: The Military Essential That Fuels Combat, Camaraderie and Communion    

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 17:49
Coffee as the conduit for memories of a military career

Crisis in Zimbabwe: Is Mugabe Finally Out?

Foreign Policy Blogs - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 16:42

A military tank with armed soldiers on the road leading to President Robert Mugabe’s office in Harare. [AP Photo: Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi]

What is happening in Zimbabwe?

It appears that 93-year old “President for Life” Robert Mugabe might finally be out of power. The military has refused to acknowledge a “coup,” but when the military leadership provide the spokesmen for the government, when generals are asserting who will and will not be acceptable as potential heads of state and government, and when people are being encouraged to remain inside, it seems pretty clear that change is afoot and that we are talking about a change fomented at least in part by the military. That may not be an according-to-Hoyle coup, but one would probably be at a loss to come up with a better term.

Last week Mugabe sacked Emmerson Mnangagwa, his second-in-command. Mugabe (or people acting on his behalf) had accused Mnangagwa of working with the military to foment a coup of his own. Now reports indicate that Mnangagwa has returned from a brief exile to take over the government.

If this is the case, it is perhaps not ideal (coups or their equivalent rarely are) but it would serve to mitigate my chief concern: That while most observers of the region have long wanted Mugabe to exit the scene, recognizing the deleterious effect he has had on his country for too much of the three-plus decades he has been in control, a power vacuum might still have been worse than anyone expected. After all without a clear plan for succession, and in lieu of Mugabe losing an election (and having Mugabe accept the results), the struggle for power in Harare might have gotten ugly. Mnangagwa is no saint, and we have no idea whether and when he might be in a position to call for elections, but if he has the support of the military and if he can lay out a clear plan moving forward perhaps Zimbabwe can avoid a bloodbath.

Perhaps.

As of now, it seems that Mnangagwa has emerged as the winner of a power struggle between his supporters (in the military and beyond) and First Lady Grace Mugabe, who has been vying to succeed her husband and has shown some of his megalomaniacal tendencies. But there is still a long way to go and much to find out before anyone should be celebrating.

The post Crisis in Zimbabwe: Is Mugabe Finally Out? appeared first on Foreign Policy Blogs.

Russia Wouldn’t Even Exist Today Without the Bolsheviks

Foreign Policy - Thu, 16/11/2017 - 16:00
The Communist Revolution was far more geopolitically influential than its contemporary critics — and even its celebrants — acknowledge.

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