Governments in Action
Irwin M. Stelzer · August 15, 2016 Poland's government has passed a law, upheld by its constitutional court, "that significantly limits the rights of people whose property in Warsaw was seized during or after World War II, and their descendants, to apply for restitution," according to the New York Times. The law sets up hurdles…
Obama Dances Night Away in Argentina
Daniel Halper · March 24, 2016 President Obama hit the dance floor last night in Argentina. Watch:
Right Turn in Latin America
David Bahr · December 8, 2015 Latin American politics has a tendency to resemble the magical realism made famous by the "boom" generation of southern-hemisphere writers a few decades ago; just when you think you've reached solid, stable ground, everything shifts and you find yourself more disoriented than when you started. It…
South America's Dynamic Duo
Jaime Daremblum · February 18, 2015 Argentine president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and Venezuelan leader, Nicolas Maduro, have much more in common than failing economies, populist rhetoric, and a penchant for extra-judicial political maneuvers: they are both the first and second (respectively) highest recipients of Chinese…
A Culture of Fear in Argentina
Dovid Margolin · February 9, 2015
Argentine Prosecutor Found Dead, Fought Iran-Backed Terror Around World
Thomas Joscelyn · January 19, 2015 Alberto Nisman, the special prosecutor who had been investigating the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center (the AMIA building) in Argentina, has been found dead in his Buenos Aires apartment. Nisman was famous in intelligence and law enforcement circles for amassing evidence that implicates…
Argentine Prosecutor Found Dead
Daniel Halper · January 19, 2015 Reuters reports:
Argentine Congress Fundraises for Hamas
Daniel Halper · October 2, 2014 A new report from the Jewish Telegraph Agency details that the Argentine congress will be fundraising for the terror group Hamas.
Why Argentina Is Struggling to Find Lifelines
Jaime Daremblum · March 26, 2014 Late last month, the Spanish energy giant Repsol agreed to accept $5 billion worth of Argentine bonds as repayment for the government’s confiscation of YPF, Argentina’s largest oil company, which was formerly controlled by Repsol until its April 2012 seizure by President Cristina Kirchner. With the…
Stand with the Falklands
Philip Terzian · March 25, 2013 The American position on the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic should be obvious.
TWS Podcast: Stand with the Falklands
TWS Podcast · March 20, 2013 THE WEEKLY STANDARD podcast with Philip Terzian on his editorial, Stand with the Falklands. Hosted by Michael Graham.
Stand with Britain on the Falklands
Jaime Daremblum · March 18, 2013 There are legitimate territorial disputes, and then there is Argentina’s dispute with Great Britain over the Falkland Islands.
Argentine Thuggery at Home and Abroad
Jaime Daremblum · December 13, 2012 Most everyone remembers what happened when Argentina invaded the British Falkland Islands in 1982. Far fewer people remember what preceded—and in many ways provoked—the Argentine invasion.
Meanwhile, in the Falkland Islands...
Mark Hemingway · November 29, 2012 The Falkland Islands seem to be popping up in the news a lot in the last month. There was the recent death of Sir Rex Hunt—the governor of the territory during the Argentine invasion—and his obituary must be read to be believed. It's like something straight out of an Evelyn Waugh novel.
Radical Leftism Fails in Argentina
Jaime Daremblum · November 19, 2012 When Argentine president Cristina Kirchner nationalized the Spanish-owned YPF oil company this past April, Washington Post correspondent Juan Forero proclaimed her “the standard-bearer of populist nationalism in Latin America.” At the time, her decision played well at home: One poll found that 62…
How Argentina and Brazil Help Iran
Jaime Daremblum · November 1, 2012 Based on last week’s debate, both President Obama and Governor Romney believe that squeezing the Iranians economically is the best way—and perhaps the only way—to end their nuclear-weapons program without resorting to a military strike. Of course, nobody knows if sanctions will actually work. But…
South America’s New Pariah
Today in Washington, Argentine vice president Amado Boudou will be addressing a Council of the Americas conference on the global economic recovery. I have no idea what Boudou will say in his remarks, and I have no idea how the attendees will receive it. But I do know this: Having a senior member of…
Oil and Trouble
Argentine president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner cannot claim to be the only world leader to lash out against oil speculators this week. Last Tuesday President Obama used an appearance in the White House Rose Garden to do the same. But Kirchner put her money where her mouth is. She announced she…
The New Falklands War
Jaime Daremblum · January 30, 2012 In 1982, Argentina’s right wing military junta launched a sudden invasion of the Falkland Islands, the South Atlantic archipelago that has been a British possession since 1833. The invasion was motivated by a desire to distract attention from the country’s severe economic woes, including…
Tango Lesson
Andrew Stuttaford · December 12, 2011 There are good days and bad days, but even on the good days the abyss is never too far away. The eurozone’s dangerously original mix of innovation, incoherence, and unaccountability makes it difficult to identify a single event that could finally push it over the edge. But, with confidence already…
Risky Business in Buenos Aires
Jaime Daremblum · August 24, 2011 Iran has a lot riding on the survival—both literal and political—of Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chávez. If the Bolivarian revolutionary beats cancer and wins another term as president, Tehran will continue to enjoy a strategic partnership with the world’s fifth largest oil exporter. But if Chávez…
Iran’s Laughable Offer
Jaime Daremblum · July 25, 2011 As Lewis Carroll’s Alice might have said, the relationship between Argentina and Iran just keeps getting “curiouser and curiouser.”
The Kirchner Government's Schizophrenic Relationship with Iran
Jaime Daremblum · June 21, 2011 Analyzing Argentina’s foreign policy can sometimes be more suited to psychiatrists than journalists. Consider, for example, how President Cristina Kirchner and Foreign Minister Héctor Timerman have handled bilateral relations with Iran.
Al Qaeda in Brazil?
Jaime Daremblum · April 7, 2011 The Brazilian magazine Veja is reporting that al Qaeda members have established an active presence in South America’s largest country, as have militants associated with Hezbollah, Hamas, and other terrorist groups. They are apparently engaged in fundraising, recruitment, and strategic…
Will Argentina Whitewash Iranian Terrorism?
Jaime Daremblum · March 30, 2011 The last time that Argentine foreign minister Héctor Timerman made international news, he was needlessly provoking a crisis in bilateral relations with the United States over a routine military-training exercise. A few weeks earlier, Timerman had accused the U.S. government of operating “torture”…
Argentina Seizes Contents of U.S. Air Force Plane
Jaime Daremblum · February 17, 2011 Shortly after Argentine foreign minister Héctor Timerman accused the United States of operating torture schools, his government decided to trigger a genuine crisis in bilateral relations.
Argentina’s Decline
Jaime Daremblum · February 9, 2011 Two recent dispatches from Buenos Aires highlight the travails of Argentine president Cristina Kirchner, whose foolish populism and economic mismanagement have created serious headaches for her government.