Nov 22, 2006 | CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND LEGISLATIVE LAW, UNITED NATIONS, DIPLOMACY & INTERNATIONAL LAW, WAR ON TERROR AND WAR IN IRAQ
By Alan Nathan © 2006 FrontPageMagazine.com There are times when the inertia of diplomacy endangers more lives than would the action it’s trying to abate, and it is at such moments when action becomes the more humane choice. Stupidly, we forget that the absence of...
Nov 10, 2006 | CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND LEGISLATIVE LAW, UNITED NATIONS, DIPLOMACY & INTERNATIONAL LAW, WAR ON TERROR AND WAR IN IRAQ
By Alan Nathan © 2006 FrontPageMag.com Iran and much of the Middle East are celebrating the Democrats’ victory. If I’m a Democrat, I’ve got to feel uncomfortable with an enemy state heralding my party’s triumph just because it views left-wingers as more easily...
Oct 20, 2006 | UNITED NATIONS, DIPLOMACY & INTERNATIONAL LAW, WAR ON TERROR AND WAR IN IRAQ
By Alan Nathan © 2006 FrontPageMag The UN’s partisans have a formula for dealing with the nuclear threat of North Korea: just sit back and relax as once more America begs legitimacy from the illegitimate. Unable to voir dire the UN Security Council as we do any other...
Oct 13, 2006 | POLITICAL PHILOSOPHIES, UNITED NATIONS, DIPLOMACY & INTERNATIONAL LAW, WAR ON TERROR AND WAR IN IRAQ
By Alan Nathan © 2006 Washington Examiner How can we maintain our allegiance to the Iraqi War when those responsible for its victorious outcome are so instrumental in its delay? It’s not as if we don’t want success or appreciate the gravity of failure. However, at...
Sep 29, 2006 | WAR ON TERROR AND WAR IN IRAQ
By Alan Nathan © 2006 Washington Examiner War opponents are cheerfully heralding the National Intelligence Council’s national intelligence estimate that portrays our war in Iraq as the catalyst for increasing terrorist volunteers. Completed in April but recently cited...
Sep 21, 2006 | CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND LEGISLATIVE LAW, ISLAM AND THE WEST, WAR ON TERROR AND WAR IN IRAQ
By Alan Nathan © 2006 The national argument has turned to guidelines for interrogating terrorist prisoners and instead of reaching a consensus that provides some legal specificity, our leaders are lunging for ambiguity in the name of international law. Their true...