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How about a little QE to go along with that PIIG?
But for Japan, which reneged on its promise to strike the Futenma base, its a humiliating retreat.
Turkey and Brazil wade into the Iran nuclear mess — to Washington's dismay
Germans, Brits and Turks are rethinking their old roles.
The Wall Street Journal is taking its battle with The New York Times to city streets, but implications are global.
The Cuba lobby feeling buoyant after dissident’s death pushes Obama to condemn Castro.
Russia blesses the revolution, leaving America and China on the outside looking in at events in Bishkek.
Not quite, but both flavors — unfettered American-style and European social democracy — are in trouble.
A “center” has emerged on foreign policy, including Republicans and Democrats rarely seen on the same side of any Washington food fight.
With the rise of China and Russia, the transatlantic relationship gains strategic importance.
How secret Greek military spending and Cold War thinking, helped push the eurozone to the brink of disaster
NATO, after year of tip-toeing, promises a plan to defend its small, eastern-most members.
EU seems paralyzed by the realization that Greece and other profligate spenders could drag the whole continent back toward the economic abyss.
On the underwear bomber, the new US intelligence system failed. But it's still better than the old one.
Barack Obama's first year in office has not wiped away the legacy of misguided decisions that preceded him.
Why don't you just take that conifer and go back where you came from?
GlobalPost columnist Michael Moran recalls his brush with the climate change thought police.
"Thank you, oh charitified Lord, for the gift of a liberal guy with an Islamic name winning the presidency after me."
Some Europeans who steered clear of the Cold War may be wavering 20 years later.
The fears of Germany and its neighbors in 1989 have largely been resolved by 2009.
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