List of U.S. 2012 Election articles
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Rights and Responsibility
The candidates may disagree on some human rights issues, but the next president will face challenges that transcend partisan lines.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 No Game Change
The bipartisan consensus in Washington about expanding ties with India may be good for New Delhi, but it's turned the election into a snoozer.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Resetting the Reset
The United States needs to decide whether to treat Russia as a marginal global actor or an asset in America's global strategy.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Back to Africa
If Barack Obama is reelected, he'll have to deliver on his promises to Africa -- and act more like Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Land of the Lost
Latin Americans may prefer Barack Obama over Mitt Romney, but few believe either candidate will pay the region the attention it deserves.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Trouble in Pyongyang
As the United States dithers, an emboldened North Korea is quietly establishing itself as a small nuclear power.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 The Tradeoff
When it comes to developing an industrial policy that can revive the U.S. economy, the president may have a leg up on his Republican challenger.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 A Tale of Two Mitts
We know where Barack Obama stands on the world's most dangerous weapons. But what's Mitt Romney's nuclear policy?
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 A Stronger Pivot
Mitt Romney would manage relations with a rising China better than Barack Obama.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Pakistani Power Play
If the United States wants to curb terrorism and nuclear proliferation, it needs to fundamentally rethink its relationship with Pakistan.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Middle East Lost
The Arab Spring gave Barack Obama the perfect opening to reorient U.S. policy in the Middle East. Too bad he blew it.
-
fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Climate Course Correction
The world has spent two decades developing policies to combat global warming -- and we have little to show for it.