The End of Intervention - Why We Can't Help in Myanmar

THE Burmese government's criminally neglectful response to last month's cyclone, and the world's response to that response, illustrate three grim realities today: totalitarian governments are alive and well; their neighbors are reluctant to pressure them to change; and the notion of national sovereignty as sacred is gaining ground, helped in no small part by the disastrous results of the American invasion of Iraq. Indeed, many of the world's necessary ... Full Story »

Posted by Kaizar Campwala

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Review

Dwight Rousu
3.1
by Dwight Rousu - Oct. 1, 2008

Albright tends to sprinkle pixy dust upon events from her era, without much introspection. Prime causality for the decline of international influence over totalitarian regimes and genocides is the deterioration of the moral authority of both the United States and the United Nations in a furthering of US aims for dominant control and de facto empire. That decline has been radically accelerated under the neo-nazi thrusts of bush, but the direction was also pushed by Albright.

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