Best Course For Dealing With The Taliban: Win, Then Negotiate -- Michael Gerson, Washington Post
The Wikileaks document download -- illustrating Afghan corruption, Pakistani duplicity and Taliban toughness -- revealed little that is new. But it will intensify a popular kind of desperation.
A consensus is growing among foreign policy realists, skittish NATO allies and antiwar activists that the time has come to cut a deal with the Taliban. The Afghan government, they argue, is hopeless; recent elections were discrediting; nation-building has failed. The only hope is to pursue not only reintegration of low- and mid-level Taliban fighters into Afghan society but reconciliation with Taliban leaders based in Pakistan.
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Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials
Taliban Responds to WikiLeaks -- Mushtaq Yusufzai, The Daily Beast
Leaks further strain U.S. relationship with Pakistan -- Sara A. Carter, Washington Examiner
Wikileaks Afghanistan: What do the leaks really tell us? -- Con Coughlin, The Telegraph
What did we learn from Putin's wild Ukrainian weekend? -- Joshua Keating, Foreign Policy
The US in "China's Lake" -- Willy Lam, Asia Sentinel
Let's hope that China and the United States won't miscalculate -- Joseph S. Nye, The Daily Star
WikiLeaks: Why national security isn't Obama's biggest concern -- Howard LaFranchi, Christian Science Monitor
Eight Problems with the New START -- Mitt Romney, National Review
Mitt Romney's dangerous game -- Daniel Larison, The Week
The New, Improved Obama -- Caroline Glick, Real Clear World/Jerusalem Post
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