Highlights from ForeignPolicy.com this week
Before we rip into this week’s stellar Web content, please indulge a little horn tooting: After only two months of the new ForeignPolicy.com, we’ve tripled our Web traffic. (Thanks to all you Passport die-hards for your help on that front.) FP‘s nose-to-the-news bloggers were all over the Chas Freeman saga — not that they agreed ...
Before we rip into this week's stellar Web content, please indulge a little horn tooting: After only two months of the new ForeignPolicy.com, we've tripled our Web traffic. (Thanks to all you Passport die-hards for your help on that front.)
Before we rip into this week’s stellar Web content, please indulge a little horn tooting: After only two months of the new ForeignPolicy.com, we’ve tripled our Web traffic. (Thanks to all you Passport die-hards for your help on that front.)
FP‘s nose-to-the-news bloggers were all over the Chas Freeman saga — not that they agreed with each other. The Cable‘s Laura Rozen got the scoop from the man himself, and Walt and Rothkopf duked it out over the Israel lobby. In addition to another appointment gone wrong, the Obama White House was plagued with unfortunate tidings. It was snub city all over again, this time for the president of Brazil, and the Germany chicken finger thing is just…wrong. (But FP editor Preeti Aroon tells us that Sasha and Malia do have a new swing set.)
If you hadn’t previously considered Copenhagen’s drug gangs or Japan’s eldery to be super threats, you need to check out this week’s List and if you were thinking of heading to Cancun for spring break don’t pack your bags before paging through our latest Photo Essay.
Other items not to miss: What’s going on in Ireland, why our governments are paying billions for military weapons we don’t need, Tom Ricks delivered food-for-thought nuggets all week long, and David Rothkopf enlightens us with new medical research that shows how sudden changes in the economy can kill us, for real.
More from Foreign Policy

Saudi-Iranian Détente Is a Wake-Up Call for America
The peace plan is a big deal—and it’s no accident that China brokered it.

The U.S.-Israel Relationship No Longer Makes Sense
If Israel and its supporters want the country to continue receiving U.S. largesse, they will need to come up with a new narrative.

Putin Is Trapped in the Sunk-Cost Fallacy of War
Moscow is grasping for meaning in a meaningless invasion.

How China’s Saudi-Iran Deal Can Serve U.S. Interests
And why there’s less to Beijing’s diplomatic breakthrough than meets the eye.