BY Javier Solana | PHOTO Wikipedia
PUBLISHED 16:50, January 3, 2012

Written by Javier Solana

Two days after Kim Jong-il, North Korea’s leader, died in a train in his country, South Korean authorities still knew nothing about it. Meanwhile, American officials seemed at a loss, with the State Department at first merely acknowledging that press reports had mentioned his death.

The South Korean and US intelligence services’ inability to pick up any sign of what had happened attests to the North Korean regime’s opaque character, but also to their own deficiencies. American planes and satellites watch North Korea day and night, and the most sensitive intelligence-gathering equipment covers the frontier between the two Koreas. Nonetheless, we know very little of that country, because all vital information is restricted to a small group of leaders obsessed with secrecy.

The leadership change is occurring at the worst possible time. It is known that Chinese leaders had hoped that Kim Jong-il would survive long enough to consolidate support among the country’s various factions for the succession of his son, Kim Jong-un.

All of the symbolic attributes of power have been transferred to Kim Jong-un – reflected in his official position in the funeral ceremonies, his presidency of the Military Commission, and his assumption of the ruling party’s highest rank – with remarkable speed. But such trappings will not make the transition process any... [Full article]

BY Gareth Evans
PUBLISHED 15:45, December 28, 2011

Written by Gareth Evans

Václav Havel, the Czech playwright and dissident turned president, and North Korean despot Kim Jong-il might have lived on different planets, for all their common commitment to human dignity, rights, and democracy. When they died just a day apart this month, the contrast was hard for the global commentariat to resist: Prague’s prince of light against Pyongyang’s prince of darkness.

But it is worth remembering that Manichaean good-versus-evil typecasting, to which former US President George W. Bush and former British... [Full article]

BY Tatiana Zhurzhenko
PUBLISHED 17:29, December 10, 2011

Written by Tatiana Zhurzhenko

Seven years ago, Ukraine’s Orange Revolution inspired hope that the country was moving towards genuine democracy. Since then, democratic freedoms have been curtailed, the former prime minister and co-leader of the revolution, Yulia Tymoshenko, has been imprisoned, and President Viktor Yanukovych’s regime has become internationally isolated. Ukraine is unraveling.

Today, a small group of oligarchs clustered around Yanukovich have captured power. They manipulate elections, control the media, and are shaping the country’s institutions to further their own business interests. Condemnation by the West has had no impact. So long as they control the country’s industries and natural resources, they will maintain their grip on power – the approach perfected by their role model, former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Whatever one thinks of Tymoshenko, she was not imprisoned for any ostensible crimes she committed while in power. She is in... [Full article]

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Climate justice

BY Desmond Tutu and Mary Robinson | PUBLISHED 14:57, December 3, 2011

Written by Desmond Tutu and Mary Robinson

Before the Copenhagen climate-change summit two years ago, the two... [Full article]

Italy’s last democratic despot

BY Edoardo Campanella | PUBLISHED 21:42, November 27, 2011

Written by Edoardo Campanella

Italy has always had a weakness for authoritarian figures. Emperors, kings, princes, or... [Full article]

Cross-border banking in the balance

BY Erik Berglof | PUBLISHED 21:07, November 14, 2011

Written by Erik Berglof

The gravity of the eurozone crisis has finally sunk in. The stakes could... [Full article]

What does Germany want?

BY Jan-Werner Mueller | PUBLISHED 21:25, November 5, 2011

Written by Jan-Werner Mueller

By now, everyone knows that Germany is calling the shots not just in... [Full article]

The Arab Spring and Europe’s chance

BY Massimo D’Alema | PUBLISHED 22:42, October 29, 2011

Written by Massimo D’Alema

The term “spring” may suggest a gentle awakening, but what is happening in... [Full article]

Hard Turkey

BY Shlomo Avineri | PUBLISHED 16:56, October 23, 2011

Written by Shlomo Avineri

The recent surge in Turkey’s military actions against the Kurds in northern Iraq... [Full article]