Imminent pullout of US troops from Afghanistan in 2014 is likely to place Afghan President Hamid Karzai between a rock and a hard place. During talks in Washington he is to bargain over whether he would seek support elsewhere in China and Iran.
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Scooped by L. Charles Burch onto MN News Hound |
Imminent pullout of US troops from Afghanistan in 2014 is likely to place Afghan President Hamid Karzai between a rock and a hard place. During talks in Washington he is to bargain over whether he would seek support elsewhere in China and Iran.
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By: Andrew Gavin Marshall The process of establishing an American Empire during and after World War II was not – as has been postulated (by those who even admit there is such a thing as an ‘American Empire’) – an ‘accident’ of history, something America seemingly stumbled into as a result of its unhindered economic growth and military-political position as arbiter of world peace and prosperity. A vast literature has developed in the academic realm and policy circles – particularly within Political Science and the think tank community, respectively – which postulates a notion of ‘American empire’ or ‘American hegemony’ as accidental, incidental, benevolent, reluctant, and desirable. Delete the scoop?
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