-
In a paper entitled Jackson-Vanik: Will Bush Reward Soviet Repression or Preserve Key Incentive for Reform, the Center illuminates the logic behind this landmark legislation and the compelling considerations that argue against waiving its provisions for the contemporary Soviet Union.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: This Is No Time To Waive Jackson-Vanik
-
On paper, Mr Bush has a good chance of getting fast-track.
ECONOMIST: George Bush inspires high hopes, and a few fears
-
This paper called on the Bush Administration to jettison immediately its arms-length policy toward Israel a recommendation made all the more imperative with the prospect of more generalized hostilities in the Middle East.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Center for Security Policy | Center Commends Bush For Making End Of Saddam Hussein��s Regime US Policy Goal
-
In fact, what was most in evidence were the numerous ways in which Soviet policy sharply diverged from that of the United States and the lengths to which President Bush was prepared to go to compromise long-standing American interests to paper over such differences.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Center for Security Policy | Post-Mortem On The Helsinki Summit: Soviet Cooperation Like This We Can��t Afford
-
In fact, what was most in evidence were the numerous ways in which Soviet policy sharply diverged from that of the United States -- and the lengths to which President Bush was prepared to go to compromise long-standing American interests to paper over such differences.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Center For Security Policy
-
In a stinging, point-by-point indictment of the regime of Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez, the paper calls on the Bush administration to repair its neglected and strained relationships across Latin America, and to work with neighboring democratic governments to ensure that the regime cannot consolidate itself or threaten its neighbors.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Center: Hasten Chavez regime change in Venezuela
-
Noting that the Latin American Left is far from monolithic, the paper urges the Bush administration to work with the hemisphere's democratic governments, even anti-American ones like that of Brazil - which has displayed growing unease about the violence and chaos around its perimeter that Venezuela has been fomenting - in order to contain the subversion and prevent the further planned violence emanating from Caracas.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Center: Hasten Chavez regime change in Venezuela