The Financial Times

Why We Should Fear a McCain Presidency

It may seem incredible to say this, given past experience, but a few years from now Europe and the world could be looking back at the Bush administration with nostalgia. This possibility will arise if the US elects Senator John McCain as president in November.

Over the years the US has inserted itself into potential flashpoints in different parts of the world. The Republican party is now about to put forward a natural incendiary as the man to deal with those… more

Anatol Lieven | March 24, 2008 | The Financial Times

Steve Clemons and Lawrence Wilkerson in Financial Times | 'A Family Business'

'A Family Business' (Finanical Times Analysis Online)

To the generation of Cuban exiles that has spent almost half a century dreaming of the day Fidel Castro left power, last week came as a cruel disappointment.

While the legendary revolutionary leader finally stepped down as head of state, the communist government he set up maintains its grip on a calm and stable Cuba. With no sign of a fundamental policy shift in Havana, Washington is also continuing the economic embargo introduced… more

History’s Hurdle for the Democrats

According to the conventional wisdom, the odds are in favour of the Democrats winning back the White House this year. With the country mired in an unpopular war in Iraq and perhaps in a prolonged recession, voters will treat the November election as a referendum on George W. Bush and punish his party. Some even see the disarray among Republican hawks, social conservatives and economic libertarians as evidence that the reign of the Grand Old Party is over and that… more

Michael Lind | February 19, 2008 | The Financial Times

Michael Lind in Financial Times | Back to 'the economy, stupid'

Back to 'the economy, stupid' How a slowdown will influence America's presidential contest (Financial Times) ..."The widespread notion that a downturn or a recession gives a clear advantage to the Democratic presidential challenger is not always supported by the facts," says Michael Lind, a political historian at the New America Foundation in Washington. "The past offers just as much evidence that we could get a Republican president with a Democratic Congress in November as a Democratic control… more
Michael Lind | January 30, 2008

New America in Financial Times | 'Presidential rivals vie over economy'

Presidential rivals vie over economy (Financial Times)

The Obama team claims its simpler package could be delivered and take effect more quickly – a claim most economists support. “When you need stimulus you cut checks,” Austan Goolsbee, an adviser to Mr Obama, told the New America Foundation. “You’ve got to get the money out the door.” more

Steven Clemons | January 23, 2008

Balkan Unrest Remains a Recipe for Disaster

In their dealings over Kosovo's independence, the European Union and Russia need to take their points of departure from reality and common responsibility for the stability of the European continent, not from legalism or self-righteousness. The Russians must recognise that, whether they and the Serbs like it or not, Kosovo will soon become independent and will be recognised as such by the US, the EU and many Muslim states. If this is not granted soon, the Kosovo Albanians will… more

Anatol Lieven | January 14, 2008 | The Financial Times

Mark Schmitt in Financial Times | 'Obama Takes Lead'

The Financial Times did a story following the Iowa caucuses. (quoted Mark Schmitt)

Mr Obama, who described his win as a "defining moment in history" and a victory of "the politics of hope over the politics of fear", can also appeal in New Hampshire to a much larger population of independent voters than in Iowa, where they came out for him in record numbers as did younger voters.

"It is hard to see what Hillary can do in five… more

Mark Schmitt | January 4, 2008

Pakistan Must Seek a Route From Dynasty to Unity

To understand the implications of Benazir Bhutto's assassination for Pakistan, first imagine what that country would look like without her Pakistan People's party. It has been overwhelmingly a dynastic party and she was the last politically viable representative of the Bhutto dynasty. Without her to hold it together, it is highly probable the PPP will disintegrate.

In the short term, this is likely to benefit President Pervez Musharraf and the army but, in the longer term, Islamist extremists may have the… more

Anatol Lieven | December 29, 2007 | The Financial Times

The Centre-Ground's Shift to the Left

Whether a Democrat or a Republican is inaugurated in January 2009, the centre of political gravity in the US is well to the left of where it was a decade ago. President George W. Bush's own contribution to the shift has been negligible. It is the result of long-term, tectonic shifts in political and economic ideology that are affecting all developed countries.

In hindsight, despite the re-election of a conservative president, 2004 was the hinge between eras. The definitions of right,… more

Michael Lind | November 27, 2007 | The Financial Times

Hopes for Annapolis and After

The absurd and tragic thing about the inability of the Israelis and Palestinians to work out a final peace settlement is that, compared with many conflicts, the terms of a settlement are not difficult to delineate and most impartial experts are agreed on them.

They are as set out in a public letter jointly issued by the New America Foundation and other bodies. Key points are a territorial settlement on the basis of the 1967 borders and that Palestinian refugees… more

Anatol Lieven | November 22, 2007 | The Financial Times