The 3 am Phone Call
December 21, 2016 · magazine_repost, FEMA, President
Who has time for history, and a guide to managing disasters of the future, when such vast, self-inflicted damage—the legacy of Obamaism, the promise of Trumpism come to mind—must be dealt with at the moment? Here's a wager: Tevi Troy's new book will do well now. It's carefully researched, well…
Five-Alarm Fire
December 16, 2016 · FEMA, President, Jeffrey Gedmin
Who has time for history, and a guide to managing disasters of the future, when such vast, self-inflicted damage—the legacy of Obamaism, the promise of Trumpism come to mind—must be dealt with at the moment? Here's a wager: Tevi Troy's new book will do well now. It's carefully researched, well…
Why Winning in Ukraine Matters
December 18, 2015 · Russia, Ukraine, Jeffrey Gedmin
It's said that hopeless causes are the only ones worth fighting for. At first blush, that's Ukraine. On a recent visit to Kiev, we heard account after account of the problems facing Ukraine, the two most serious being corruption and the ongoing conflict with Russia. Two doozies, to be sure.
America and Britain, BFF?
November 23, 2015 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine, Foreign Policy
At the end of World War II, a gifted young British expert on Russia named Thomas Brimelow—later ambassador to Poland, but at the time reporting from Moscow—ventured that what the Soviet Union respected most about Great Britain was “our ability to collect friends.” Indeed, having allies in this…
High Anxiety in the Baltics
October 5, 2015 · Russia, Vladimir Putin, Jeffrey Gedmin
In fall 1991, a member of the Slovenian parliament visited me at my office at the American Enterprise Institute to discuss her country’s campaign to join NATO. I recall the intensity of the conversation and how odd her zeal seemed to me at that moment. The Cold War was over. Slovenia’s fate as a…
In Macedonia and the Balkans, Russia Throws Down the Gauntlet
June 11, 2015 · Russia, Jeffrey Gedmin, Blog
A Kiev-based Ukrainian friend, after meeting a delegation of young Russians, emails me: "totally terrible, young Russian diplomats. Manipulation, propaganda, gloating over victory in Eastern Ukraine, this new generation even worse than before. We will have big trouble with Russia for a very long…
Things Fall Apart
February 16, 2015 · Russia, Ukraine, Jeffrey Gedmin
Warsaw
In Poland, Ghosts of Past, Putin's Present
October 7, 2014 · Russia, Jeffrey Gedmin, Ukraine
Gdansk
Europe's Amazing Anti-Israel Ways
July 25, 2014 · Hamas, Israel, anti-Semitism
I've lived in Europe the past dozen years—in Berlin, Prague, and London. When it comes to Israel, Europe's ways seldom cease to amaze.
Ukraine: the Day After
March 10, 2014 · Revolution, Jeffrey Gedmin, Ukraine
It was a year or two before the Berlin Wall fell in 1989. I was sitting in the kitchen of a small, second-floor apartment in the Thuringian town of Ilmenau, when my friend’s mother turned pensive and pointed out the window to a hill nearby. In 1945, Frau Loebner explained, American soldiers arrived…
Russia’s Long Shadow
March 3, 2014 · Russia, Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Tallinn
John Tavener, 1944-2013
November 13, 2013 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Music, Blog
There's a black and white photo, a little grainy and slightly out of focus, of Igor Stravinsky greeting Mstislav Rostropovich at the Royal Academy of Music, London, in June 1964. Standing in the background in the upper left hand corner is a tall lanky figure, a 20-year-old music student named John…
The Grass File
September 17, 2007 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine, Books and Arts
Peeling the Onion
A Revolution Gone Sour?
January 1, 2007 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Kiev
Putin, in London, with Poison
December 11, 2006 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
London
Even Happier than the Democrats
November 20, 2006 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Berlin
"Der Terror Ist Da"
September 11, 2006 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Berlin
Letter from London
August 21, 2006 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
London
Hangin' with Hezbollah
August 14, 2006 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Jerusalem
Europe Meets Israel
July 31, 2006 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Tel Aviv
Some Peace Movement
June 26, 2006 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Berlin
Next Year in Damascus
October 24, 2005 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
I ATTENDED A MEETING OF about 40 Syrian exile oppositionists in Paris last week. It was a bit surreal. There was the Syrian-Kurd who lives in Germany, for instance, a sweet, grandfatherly fellow with a big white mustache. The guy introduced himself to me, I glanced at his name tag to make sure I…
Plan B for Iran
July 18, 2005 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
YOU CAN BE SURE, had Hashemi Rafsanjani been voted president in Iran's recent election, a chorus of pundits would have been calling for the administration to drop its hard line and "engage" Tehran. We witnessed this last time, when "moderate" Mohammad Khatami became president in 1997. Of course,…
Axis of Weakness
October 18, 2004 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Berlin
An Orgy of Anti-Americanism
May 24, 2004 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Berlin
Iraq's Silent Majority
November 10, 2003 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Baghdad
"Death to the Aspen Institute"
April 21, 2003 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Berlin
Ich Bin Ein Slacker
August 12, 2002 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
BERLIN Breakfast in Berlin is brilliant. My favorite place to go is the Mokkabar, a cafe in Kreuzberg, the district where violent lefties used to blow up cars and that the city's Turks have always called home. Today, Kreuzberg, at least the neighborhood of the Mokkabar, has calmed down. It's…
Our Most Surprising Ally
November 5, 2001 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
CONSIDER two foreign ministers. The first wants "to destroy" the Taliban; the second to work with "moderate Taliban leaders." The first warns repeatedly that a key terrorist aim is "the destruction of Israel." The second seeks, even now after the assassination of a government minister, to increase…
Saddam Hussein's French Kiss
October 16, 2000 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
WHEN RICHARD BUTLER once shared with the United Nations Security Council a series of high-altitude photographs of some 130 heavy Republican Guard trucks gathering at an isolated spot in the desert -- they had just fled an inspection site as Butler and his arms inspection team were approaching --…
Our European Problem
June 19, 2000 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Munich
Montenegro
November 22, 1999 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
Podgorica, Montenegro
TOASTING NATO
April 19, 1999 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
WHEN THE HISTORY OF NATO'S DEMISE is written, the entire affair, it will be said, was rich with irony. It was on the eve of the Washington Summit in April 1999. Western leaders were preparing to toast each other in the American capital when a defining moment inconveniently emerged, courtesy of…
THE NEW EUROPE -- MENACE
March 29, 1999 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
There was high-flown talk of dreams becoming reality. The finance ministers were "visibly moved," said press reports. The Italian was "proud" to be able to call himself "a European citizen." The Portuguese called it a page "that can never be turned back," while others beamed about the "new…
FREEING EUROPE
December 8, 1997 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine, Books and Arts
George R. Urban
CLINTON'S TOUCHY-FEELY FOREIGN POLICY
May 13, 1996 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Magazine
The Center for Attitudinal Healing "pursues healing and development at a personal, social, and spiritual level." The Center's work "empowers a deeply shared experience from which an enduring sense of community can grow." " Choose peace rather than conflict," starts one mantra -- "and love rather…
THE EURO-BASHER
April 15, 1996 · Jeffrey Gedmin, Blog
Mention Maastricht and eyes glaze over. That is, of course, unless discussion is punctuated by anecdotes about Brussels bureaucrats working feverishly to "harmonize" rules on everything from the size of condoms to the curvature of bananas. According to new legislation, "visually challenged" truck…