Entradas nuevas por Matías Salazar Huneeus

The Slow Rise and Sudden Fall of the G-7

Artículo
Foreign Policy, 13.06.2018
Daniel J. Sargent, historiador (Harvard) y profesor norteamericano  (U. California-Berkeley)
  • The history of the Group of Seven shows how the West went from a geographic category to a geopolitical group — and back again
[caption id="attachment_30998" align="alignleft" width="400"] US President Ronald Reagan talks to Japanese Premier Yasuhiro...
Leer más

Marginalized youth: Toward an inclusive Jordan

Artículo
Brookings Policy Briefing, 06.06.2018
Beverley Milton-Edwards, profesora de Politica (Queen's University-Belfast)
This policy briefing explores the impact of political, social, and economic marginalization on Jordan’s youth. It highlights the growing tensions between the government and its increasingly agitated young citizens over the matter. Those tensions manifest in political apathy, disaffection among tribal youth, and radicalization. If the...
Leer más

It’s Time for a Coup in Venezuela

Artículo
Foreign Policy, 05.06.2018
José R. Cárdenas, ex Administrador asistente para América Latina (USAID)
  • Only nationalists in the military can restore a legitimate constitutional democracy
[caption id="attachment_30797" align="alignleft" width="400"] Venezuelan National Guard personnel take part in the launching ceremony of the "Plan Republica", the security operation for the presidential election on May...
Leer más

Trump’s Kaiser Wilhelm Approach to Diplomacy

Artículo
Foreign Policy, 29.05.2018
Jeremi Suri, doctor en historia norteamericano (Yale) y profesor de Asuntos Globales (U. de Texas-Austin)
  • For the U.S. president, like the last German monarch, foreign policy is all about personal ego, not national interests
[caption id="attachment_30624" align="alignleft" width="400"] Donald Trump arrives for the morning working session on the...
Leer más

How Secure Is Maduro After Venezuela’s Sham Election?

Artículoç
World Politics Review, 24.05.2018
Frida Ghitis, analista internacional
[caption id="attachment_30445" align="alignright" width="400"] Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro before addressing supporters after his re-election (AP/Ariana Cubillos).[/caption] There was never any doubt about who would win Sunday’s presidential election in Venezuela. The lead-up was so patently undemocratic that even before the vote took place,...
Leer más

El sultán del siglo XXI que sueña con volver al Imperio Otomano

Reportaje
Infobae, 19.05.2018
Gustavo Sierra
  • El presidente turco Recep Tayyip Erdogan concentra cada vez más poder. El ejército de su país controla territorio en Siria e Irak y construye bases en Qatar, Somalia y Sudán. Quiere recrear el poderío que tuvieron los otomanos por seis siglos
[caption id="attachment_30343" align="alignright" width="400"] Tayyip Erdogan...
Leer más

Aung San Suu Kyi Is A Politician, Not A Monster

Artículo
Foreign Policy, 14.05.2018
Peter A. Coclanis, historiador, profesor y director del Global Research Institute (U. de NC-Chapel Hill)
  • Western liberals projected their own hopes onto "the Lady" — and then blamed her for not living up to them
[caption id="attachment_30307" align="alignright" width="400"] Volunteers take down posters of Aung San Suu Kyi...
Leer más

The Perils of a Putsch in Venezuela

Artículo
Foreign Policy, 04.05.2018
Brian Fonseca, profesor de política y RRII (U. Internacional de Florida)
  • Encouraging a coup in Caracas will give Russia and China a foothold in the United States’ backyard
[caption id="attachment_29915" align="alignleft" width="420"] A member of the national guard fires his shotgun at opposition demonstrators during clashes in...
Leer más

Comentarios nuevos por Matías Salazar Huneeus