Our big Web week
The new ForeignPolicy.com "The DC wonkosphere event of the New Year…" Ross Douthat, The Atlantic "A Foreign Policy Treasure Trove…" Tim Stark, Deutsche Welle "Some real heavyweights…" Michael Goldfarb, The Weekly Standard "That new Foreign Policy website is craaazy…" Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic Who’s having the best week ever? Josh Keating says it’s Ahmadinejad, but ...
"The DC wonkosphere event of the New Year…" Ross Douthat, The Atlantic
"A Foreign Policy Treasure Trove…" Tim Stark, Deutsche Welle
"Some real heavyweights…" Michael Goldfarb, The Weekly Standard
"That new Foreign Policy website is craaazy…" Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic
Who’s having the best week ever? Josh Keating says it’s Ahmadinejad, but I’d like to throw in a blatant bid of self-promotion and say actually, the new ForeignPolicy.com is having the best week ever.
At the very least it’s been a big week over here in the FP offices. And, if by some chance, you haven’t already noticed our stunning new homepage, ForeignPolicy.com, or haven’t yet had a minute to peruse the brand-spanking new lineup of first-rate bloggers or the new features we’ve added to our menu of reading delights here’s a quick rundown of what you missed.
Fiascos: The Best Defense blogger, Tom Ricks, gets at whether or not the Army War College curtailed their criticism of the Iraq war for fear of institutional retaliation
Smack Talk: New blogger Stephen Walt, coauthor of The Israel Lobby, tousled with David Rothkopf over his thought experiment on Israel
Scoops: The Cable‘s Laura Rozen is your insider’s guide to who’s getting what job in the Obama administration and who’s not getting any calls…
Regrets and some nostaglia: Some of Bush’s top staffers critiqued their old boss’s legacy on Shadow Government.
Now that the critics have weighed in, it’s the readers’ turn. Go on, check it out and get back to us.
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