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PUBLICATIONS BY Helle C. Dale

Research

Commentary

Media Appearances


2008 Research

March 14, 2008
Public Diplomacy: Reinvigorating America's Strategic Communications Policy
By Edwin J. Feulner, Ph.D., Helle C. Dale, Colleen Graffy, Michael Doran, Ph.D., Joseph Duffey, Ph.D., and Tony Blankley
(Heritage Lecture #1065)
U.S. government agencies are hampered in their efforts to improve public diplomacy by a combination of poor leadership, inadequate coordination, and insufficient resources. As we seek to improve the U.S. image abroad and engage in a war of ideas with Muslim extremism, improving the relevant public diplomacy structures of the U.S. government are crucial.

 

February 11, 2008
U.S. Public Diplomacy: The Search for a National Strategy
By Helle C. Dale
(Executive Memorandum #1029)
Engaging strategically in the war of ideas is crucial to U.S. national security, but U.S. public diplomacy is hampered by a lack of leadership, poor interagency coordination, and a lack of resources to engage foreign audiences. In today’s rapidly expanding information universe, efforts to reach foreign audiences need to be more targeted, deliberate, and coordinated than ever before.

 


2007 Research

September 18, 2007
Public Diplomacy and the Cold War: Lessons Learned
By Carnes Lord, Ph.D., and Helle C. Dale
(Backgrounder #2070)
After the fall of the Berlin Wall, leaders in both the legislative and executive branches essentially discarded public diplomacy as a Cold War relic. Since 9/11, the situation has improved only marginally if at all. To restore America’s voice, government leaders should draw on the nation’s Cold War legacy to lay the foundation for the next generation of public diplomacy.

 

May 25, 2007
Bush Administration Scores Victory on Iraq Vote
By Helle C. Dale and James Phillips
(WebMemo #1474)
Congress has finally carried out its obligation to fund the American troops on the frontlines of the global war against terrorism.

 

March 19, 2007
Improve the Visa Waiver Program with Exit Checks for New Participants
By James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., Helle C. Dale, and James Dean
(WebMemo #1400)
A simple way to move forward in instituting a mandatory exit registry program in a practical, affordable, and reasonable manner.

 

March 07, 2007
Bush's Trip to Latin America: Urge Mexico to Adopt Economic Reforms
By Helle Dale
(WebMemo #1387)
President Bush’s trip south represents an opportunity to realistically address the issue of a mass Mexican migration to the United States.

 

February 15, 2007
Nuance in Chavez's Rhetoric Tells of Future Plans for Region
By Helle C. Dale
(WebMemo #1360)
Unless the U.S. increases its presence in the region through support for democratic institutions and market institutions, the aspirations of Marti, Bolivar, Castro, and now Chavez may come to fruition.

 

February 05, 2007
Memo to Congress on Iraq: Don't Legislate Defeat Again!
By Helle C. Dale
(WebMemo #1338)
As with the Vietnam War, the Iraq War could be won or lost on the home front if Congress persists in passing resolutions undercutting or limiting the President’s ability to conduct the war.

 

February 01, 2007
Executive Summary: How to Fix the 100 Hours Homeland Security Bill
By James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., Baker Spring, James Sherk, Brian W. Walsh, Lisa Curtis, and Helle C. Dale
(Executive Summary #2003)
The Implementing the 9/11 Commission Recommendations Act of 2007, passed by the House as a part of the Speaker’s “100 Hours” agenda, muddles the mission of providing homeland security with misguided proposals. Congress should replace the most troubling provisions of H.R. 1 with initiatives that are more consistent with the 9/11 Commission’s recommendations.

 

February 01, 2007
How to Fix the 100 Hours Homeland Security Bill
By James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., Baker Spring, James Sherk, Brian W. Walsh, Lisa Curtis, and Helle C. Dale
(Backgrounder #2003)
The Implementing the 9/11 Commission Recommendations Act of 2007, passed by the House as a part of the Speaker’s “100 Hours” agenda, muddles the mission of providing homeland security with misguided proposals. Congress should replace the most troubling provisions of H.R. 1 with initiatives that are more consistent with the 9/11 Commission’s recommendations.

 

January 24, 2007
A Plan Forward for U.S. Public Diplomacy
By Helle C. Dale
(Executive Memorandum #1018)
An effective public diplomacy and strategic communication strategy must look beyond short-term needs, assign clear authorities and responsibilities, and establish sensible processes to aid research, planning, clearing, and assessment. Congress can help by reauthorizing funds for the now-defunct U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, which can provide input to keep involved agencies from just serving themselves.

 


2006 Research

December 06, 2006
NATO in Afghanistan: A Test Case for Future Missions
By Helle C. Dale
(Backgrounder #1985)
The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan presents an opportunity to observe the successes and shortcomings of voluntary international military operations. To accomplish its mission in Afghanistan and its overall mission, NATO should develop interoperable communications systems, address troop levels and capabilities, address proportional funding, and seriously consider further enlargement to include Alliance-friendly members.

 

November 27, 2006
NATO in Afghanistan: A Test Case for Future Missions (Draft)
By Helle C. Dale
(Backgrounder #9999)
The future of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has become inextricably linked to the future of Afghanistan.

 

October 10, 2006
Bush's Global Cultural Initiative: A Step Toward Revitalizing U.S. Public Diplomacy
By Stephen Johnson and Helle Dale
(WebMemo #1234)
The Global Cultural Initiative breathes new life into America’s public diplomacy efforts and will promote close-up views of the United States.

 

August 30, 2006
Economic and Political Rights at the U.N.: A Guide for U.S. Policymakers
By Helle C. Dale
(Backgrounder #1964)
The American understanding of freedom is often quite different from definitions embraced by other countries, particularly those from a Communist, Socialist, or even Continental European tradition.

 

January 31, 2006
A Foreign Policy Agenda for the State of the Union
By Helle Dale
(WebMemo #974)
Iraq, Iran, the war on terrorism, democracy promotion, and more.

 


2005 Research

November 28, 2005
Challenges Facing Europe in a World of Globalization
By Helle C. Dale
(Heritage Lecture #914)
Without the willingness to tackle rigidity and stagnation in its major economies, any grand EU ambition to become a superpower, to create a new international order, or to enlarge into Asia and North Africa will not have much of a chance. Flexibility and reform on many levels is key to Europe's success in the future.

 

November 18, 2005
Al-Hurrah Television and Lessons for U.S. Public Diplomacy
By Helle C. Dale
(Heritage Lecture #909)
Our public diplomacy should promote U.S. interests and security through understanding, informing, and influencing foreign publics, as well as broadening dialogue between American institutions and their counterparts abroad. Rethinking the mission involves going beyond Al-Hurrah and critically reconsidering the confusing organizational structure of U.S. public diplomacy.

 

October 17, 2005
Cultural Diversity and Freedom at Risk at UNESCO
By Janice A. Smith and Helle Dale
(WebMemo #885)
A "cultural diversity" convention would threaten free markets, free speech, and freedom.

 

August 05, 2005
Strengthening U.S. Public Diplomacy Requires Organization, Coordination, and Strategy
By Stephen Johnson, Helle C. Dale, and Patrick Cronin, Ph.D.
(Backgrounder #1875)
The Bush Administration and Congress have made progress in some areas of public diplomacy, but the United States will lag in foreign outreach unless bureaucratic structures are streamlined, better coordinated, and focused on tasks at hand. A new Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy may help, but that is clearly not enough.

 

August 05, 2005
Executive Summary: Strengthening U.S. Public Diplomacy Requires Organization, Coordination, and Strategy
By Stephen Johnson, Helle C. Dale, and Patrick Cronin, Ph.D.
(Executive Summary #1875)
The Bush Administration and Congress have made progress in some areas of public diplomacy, but the United States will lag in foreign outreach unless bureaucratic structures are streamlined, better coordinated, and focused on tasks at hand. A new Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy may help, but that is clearly not enough.

 

June 02, 2005
The Bush Doctrine: What the President Said and What It Means
By Norman Podhoretz, The Honorable Peter Whener, John Sullivan, Larry M. Wortzel, Ph.D., and Helle C. Dale
(Heritage Lecture #881)
President Bush has placed support for freedom and liberty worldwide at the center of American foreign policy and has tied American vital interests directly to our national values and ideals, realizing that these values bind us together as Americans and bind America to others around the world who have those values or aspire to those liberties.

 

June 01, 2005
A New Perspective on Kosovo's Final Status
By Helle C. Dale and John C. Hulsman, Ph.D.
(Backgrounder #1857)
Because the Balkans' future depends on integration into a Euro-Atlantic framework within the next decade, the Bush Administration should encourage the leveraging of EU economic incentives to bring about a resolution of Kosovo's final status that opens the door to NATO accession for qualifying Balkan countries and allows for drawdown and redeployment of the 7,000 American troops stationed in Kosovo.

 

April 08, 2005
The ADVANCE Democracy Act: A Dose of Realism Needed
By Ariel Cohen, Ph.D., and Helle C. Dale
(Executive Memorandum #968)
The promotion of democracy remains an important U.S. foreign policy goal, but the ADVANCE Democracy Act could hinder it. The U.S. should continue its tradition of aiding burgeoning democracies, but in a way that also takes into account U.S. vital interests, especially national security, and does not limit the executive branch's ability to conduct foreign policy.

 

April 07, 2005
Anti-Americanism and Responses to American Power
By Helle C. Dale
(Heritage Lecture #870)
A major strategic effort by the U.S. government is needed to counter anti-Americanism in the Muslim world. To craft effective U.S. government responses to anti-Americanism, we need to consider three factors relating to anti-Americanism abroad—root causes, lethality, and public policy tools. What we need from the second Bush Administration is action.

 

March 15, 2005
New Leadership, New Hope for Public Diplomacy
By Stephen Johnson and Helle Dale
(WebMemo #688)
Karen Hughes has the opportunity to remake U.S. public diplomacy.

 


2004 Research

October 19, 2004
Defense Transformation and the New Allies
By Helle C. Dale
(Heritage Lecture #853)
Addressing the technological gap between the United States and its new and necessary allies will be one of the most important strategic challenges we face in the years ahead. The United States will have to "cherry pick" how and where it will engage with NATO allies to best close the technology gap.

 

October 07, 2004
The Real News in the Duelfer Report
By Helle Dale
(WebMemo #583)
Saddam didn't have WMDs. That's not the real news from the Duelfer Report.

 

June 02, 2004
Iraqi Prisoner Crisis: Correcting America's Communications Failure
By Stephen Johnson & Helle Dale
(Executive Memorandum #935)
To address the Abu Ghraib incidents, the Administration should put military public affairs officers fully in the command loop in Iraq and show the world how the rule of law applies to U.S. armed forces. Additionally, it should develop a military–civilian public diplomacy strategy and strengthen public diplomacy leadership at the U.S. Department of State.

 

April 08, 2004
Setting the Record Straight: Condoleezza Rice and the 9/11 Commission
By Helle Dale and James Phillips
(WebMemo #471)
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice's strong performance in her appearance before the September 11 Commission should put to rest any notion that the Bush administration was complacent or inattentive to the terrorist threat facing the United States before September 11.

 

January 21, 2004
The State of Homeland Security and the War on Terrorism
By Helle Dale
(WebMemo #391)
While American presidents in an election year have traditionally spent more time touting their domestic programs, this President's most important accomplishment has been to keep the United States safe from terrorist attacks since September 11. In that sense, it was as much a speech on the State of the War on Terrorism as it was a speech on the State of the Union.

 


2003 Research

May 14, 2003
Reclaiming America's Voice Overseas
By Stephen Johnson and Helle Dale
(WebMemo #273)
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and opposition to U.S. actions in Iraq have shown that America's image abroad is in serious trouble, particularly in the Middle East where U.S. policies, culture, and values are poorly understood. For more than two years, Congress and the White House have struggled to reclaim America's international public relations capability with minimal success.

 

April 23, 2003
How to Reinvigorate U.S. Public Diplomacy
By Stephen Johnson and Helle Dale
(Backgrounder #1645)
To reverse America's declining image abroad, both public diplomacy and related international broadcasting agencies need a clear chain of command as well as adequate personnel and financial resources.

 

January 28, 2003
Disarming Iraq & More: State of the Union Response
By Helle Dale
(WebMemo #197)
In the State of the Union address, the Bush Administation builds its case against Iraq in a manner that has not been done before.

 


2002 Research

November 19, 2002
NATO Reform: What Washington Should Accomplish in Prague
By John C. Hulsman, Ph.D., and Helle Dale
(Executive Memorandum #840)
The upcoming NATO summit is the best chance for the U.S. and its European allies to adapt the alliance to fit the needs of the post-9/11 era. The Administration's should emphasize two reform proposals: increasing the alliance's strategic and political flexibility and pressing Europeans to improve their capabilities within NATO.

 

October 30, 2002
What Berlin Must Do
By Dr. Nile Gardiner and Helle Dale
(Backgrounder #1609)
Germany is at a crossroads.  It can either stand in isolation by opposing action against Iraq, or it can join the international coalition to remove a menacing dictatorship from power. If Berlin refuses to confront the Iraqi threat, it will be seen as irrelevant in the fight against terrorism.

 

October 30, 2002
BG1609ES:  What Berlin Must Do to Repair
By Dr. Nile Gardiner and Helle Dale
(Backgrounder #1609)
BG1609ES:  What Berlin Must Do to Repair the U.S.-German Alliance

 


2008 Commentary

May 08, 2008
London drama
By Helle Dale
You can call him Red Ken -- or the canary in the coalmine of British Labor politics.  On Friday, that canary took a nosedive from its perch, when the citizens of London voted out Ken Livingstone as mayor of London after eight years in office. His part of the worst local election showing for the Labor Party in 40 years. It reflects just how fast and how far the party's fortunes have sunk under Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

 

May 01, 2008
NATO allies put pressure on Russia
By Helle Dale
What do you do when confronted by a bully? The first lesson you learn as a child in the school yard is that reasoning and turning the other cheek unfortunately does not work very well, and will only get you a reputation as an easy victim. On the other hand, knocking someone's teeth out because of a mean taunt is not the way to go either. Producing an immediate, proportionate response is a skill you have to learn.

 

April 24, 2008
U.S. relations
By Helle Dale
In the course of presidential election politics, the present inevitably takes a beating. In the discussion of American global leadership, virtually no good news ever gets into the debate, to the extent foreign policy is discussed at all.

 

April 16, 2008
Sabotaging Colombia
By Helle Dale
With friends like these, who needs enemies? This thought might well have presented itself to President Alvaro Uribe of Colombia in the last few days, as he watched the recently negotiated free trade agreement with the United States fall victim to American election politics. In a hemisphere where strongman politics and authoritarian rule are tenaciously making a comeback, the leadership of the Democratic Party has just inflicted a severe blow on the reputation of the United States as a reliable international partner and on U.S. trade policy as a whole.

 

April 10, 2008
Missile defense.
By Helle Dale
The decision by NATO members last week in Bucharest to endorse American plans for a third missile-defense site located in Europe represents a huge step forward for the alliance and for American and European security. It is an achievement for American diplomacy that many thought was beyond reach.

 

April 03, 2008
Globalize NATO?
By Helle Dale
You have to wonder whether the leaders from the NATO countries, who will be convening Wednesday through Friday in Bucharest, will not feel just a touch of nostalgia for the old days of the Cold War when the world seemed so much simpler. They will in fact be meeting in the cavernous halls of the humongous Romanian parliament building, built by Romania's crazy communist dictator Nicolau Ceausescu.

 

March 20, 2008
Progress in Iraq
By Helle Dale
What impact would a Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama victory have on U.S. foreign policy, a foreign journalist wanted to know. How would the world be able to tell the difference between them and the Bush administration? The hoped-for answer seemed to be that the United States would suddenly be enamored of international institutions like the United Nations and otherwise stop acting so "unilateralist."

 

March 13, 2008
Playing fast and loose with free trade
By Helle Dale
The longer the Democratic primaries go on, the more we learn about Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. This is obviously a very useful process. During the Ohio primary, for instance, we learned that both Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama want to tear up the North American Free Trade Agreement. This was certainly startling news to both the Mexicans and the Canadians, though it obviously played well in Ohio where manufacturing jobs have been in decline.

 

February 28, 2008
Darfur First
By Helle Dale
It is not often that one has occasion to applaud political pronouncements coming out of Hollywood. It is usually enough to turn your opinion in the opposite direction when you watch the parade of Hollywood celebrities on Capitol Hill, brought in to testify for no other reason than their talent in front of the camera.

 

February 14, 2008
Islam, Britain
By Helle Dale
With all the elegance of a bull in a china shop, Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, last week made a foray into the difficult subject of how Muslims fit into Western societies. The ensuing crashing and banging is still going on in Britain and can be heard across the pond.

 

February 07, 2008
Forward Progress
By Helle Dale
Last week brought the good news that an unfortunate dispute between the United States and one of its best allies in Europe found the promise of a resolution. After meetings with officials in Washington, Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski stated that the U.S. and Polish governments had reached an agreement in principle on plans to install a U.S. missile defense system on Polish territory, one dealing with Polish security concerns. It is an important step forward on an issue that had become dangerously stalled and a serious problem between allies whose close relationship predates the fall of the Berlin Wall.

 

February 01, 2008
Bush's Freedom Agenda
By Helle Dale
It was not exactly a farewell speech, but there was still a sense of the passing of the baton at President Bush's State of the Union Monday night. This would be the last time for eight years that Mr. Bush addressed Congress, and perhaps for that reason the atmosphere was more courteous and the bipartisan applause more generous than has otherwise been the case in recent years. You could not help wonder who will be standing in that spot next year.

 

January 24, 2008
Remarkable Progress in Iraq
By Helle Dale
Not every dark cloud has a silver lining, but $100 per barrel oil could have at least one: the boost it is providing for Iraq's long-suffering economy. Combined with greater political stability, and spreading zones of security, ascending oil prices are showing promise of making 2008 one of the best years Iraq has had in a long while.

 

January 10, 2008
Changing the Middle East
By Helle Dale
How many times have we heard it, and how many times will we hear it again before November — this election is about change? Thanks to the campaign rhetoric of Sen. Barack Obama, any kind of change is now supposedly what voters want. The irony of American politics is of course that politicians tend to enter office on just such a platform, only to be identified as part of the status quo almost the moment they take office. Such is the ponderous weight of the federal government, whose course is slower to change than that of a U.S. aircraft carrier.

 

January 03, 2008
Cover story
By Helle Dale
As the media does its traditional review of the past year, Time magazine's choice of "Person of the Year" once again comes as a puzzlement.

 


2007 Commentary

December 27, 2007
U.S. foreign policy-making
By Helle Dale
Many of us cheered loudly when President Bush announced the inspired choice of John Bolton as ambassador to the United Nations in 2005. As one of the most hardnosed and down-to-earth policy-makers in Washington, Mr. Bolton seemed just the man for the job, an ambassador in the mold of Jeane Kirkpatrick who would not be possessed by clientitis. Meanwhile, Democrats and foreign media alike gasped at the choice.

 

December 20, 2007
State of decay
By Helle Dale
When Newt Gingrich launched his frontal assault on the State Department in 2003, in the context of the Iraq crisis, a lot of people applauded. "Without bold dramatic change at the State Department, the United States will soon find itself on the defensive everywhere except militarily. In the long run that is a very dangerous position for the world's leading democracy to be in. Indeed in the long run that is an unsustainable position." Four years later, you have to admire the man's prescience.

 

December 13, 2007
Hello, Gazpromia
By Helle Dale
On Monday, at least part of the answer emerged to the question of what the future holds for Russia. By all appearances, it is going to become an official energy conglomerate -- Goodbye Russia; Hello, Gazpromia.

 

December 06, 2007
Bearing down on democracy
By Helle Dale
"A good example of domestic political stability" is the way Russian President Vladimir Putin described Russia's parliamentary election. If so, the stability of rigor mortis is settling into the country's moribund democracy. No wonder Mr. Putin is pleased. Not only did his party, United Russia, get 63 percent of the vote, but its coalition partners in the Russian Duma also pulled in almost 80 percent. Indeed, the Russian president is doing almost as well with Russian voters as Saddam Hussein used to be with the Iraqis, who re-elected him with 99 percent support time after time.

 

November 29, 2007
Knotty issues
By Helle Dale
Could it be that there was a whiff of desperation this week over the Middle East summit in Annapolis? One gets the feeling that these days, the Bush administration is acting more with history in mind than anything else — certainly more than with a sense of reality. One need only look back to President Bush's predecessor to find a similar legacy syndrome at work.

 

November 22, 2007
Chavez under fire
By Helle Dale
How refreshing. After years of this man's odious and idiotic ranting on the international stage, someone finally told Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez to put a sock in it. At last week's Ibero-American summit in Santiago, Chile, King Juan Carlos of Spain was outraged by Mr. Chavez's attacks on former Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar as a "fascist." The king angrily told Mr. Chavez "Why don't you just shut up!" Yes, indeed. It would have been nice if someone had told Mr. Chavez to "shut up" when he called President Bush "the devil" at the U.N. General Assembly last year. It is past time the international community starts challenging Mr. Chavez's shenanigans.

 

November 15, 2007
America's partners
By Helle Dale
Over the past week, three leaders of important American allies arrived for meetings with President Bush — Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, President Nicolas Sarkozy of France and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany. With each of these countries, the United States has a long alliance history. In more recent times, particularly over the issue of Iraq, however, it has been a history characterized by a certain dissonance and by anti-Americanism.

 

November 08, 2007
Pakistan tumults
By Helle Dale
One of the persistent challenges of U.S. foreign policy is the necessity at various times to partner with allies of dubious distinction. You could call it "hold your nose" diplomacy. From World War II, pictures of the smiling faces of Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin serve as a reminder of the power of expediency. Had it not been for Hitler, this unlikely alliance would never have taken place.

 

October 25, 2007
Pushing paper
By Helle Dale
A rose is a rose by any other name — and the European constitution is still a constitution even if it is now called the European Reform Treaty.

 

October 18, 2007
Armenian folly
By Helle Dale
A long-smoldering dispute between Turks and Armenians over events nearly a century old has finally erupted into full flame in the charged atmosphere of Washington politics in the shape of the Armenian Genocide resolution. The nonbinding resolution passed the House Committee on Foreign Affairs last week by a vote of 27-21, following several unsuccessful attempts going back to 2000. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has pledged to make sure the resolution reaches the floor of the House. If it passes, it will send shock waves throughout American policy in the Middle East.

 

October 11, 2007
Skeptics needed
By Helle Dale
Being the voice of reason in a debate where emotions and political agendas have captured the popular imagination takes great courage. In discussions of climate change today, you will run into assertions ranging from the "fact" that the polar ice cap will melt and reverse the Gulf Stream to the "fact" that 80 percent of the world's scientists agree that humans cause global warming.

 

October 04, 2007
Euro-syndrome
By Helle Dale
As the presidential election of 2008 draws closer, expect to hear increasingly about the blessings of the European welfare states from Democratic candidates. In both domestic policy and international affairs, Democrats are Europeans in disguise.

 

September 27, 2007
Taking on the Islamists
By Helle Dale
Kids here in the suburban Copenhagen area are pragmatic about immigrants. They do not categorize them by faith, nationality or skin color but by size. There are the "small immigrants" and the "big immigrants." Many find the "big immigrants" threatening, especially when they travel in groups of young men in the evening.

 

September 20, 2007
Spread the word
By Helle Dale
Clearly, judging by his most recently released tape Osama bin Laden "had some work done," as they say. Sporting a newly darkened beard, he reminded the world on the anniversary of September 11 that he's still around, three years after his last appearance.

 

September 07, 2007
Putin's ambition
By Helle Dale
A Danish ambassador to Peter the Great was asked by the czar to point out his country on the map. Embarrassed at the size of his homeland compared to the vast Russian expanse, the ambassador evaded the question, and rather than point to the Lilliputian Scandinavian country from which he hailed, he put his finger on Greenland, the world's biggest island. "Let me show you one of our colonies," he said slyly, but truthfully. Peter the Great, of course, was suitably impressed.

 

August 31, 2007
Bush's Vietnam analogy
By Helle Dale
The world of bloggers and opinion writers is agog over President Bush's use of the Vietnam analogy in his speech last week to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. After years of resisting the comparison with Vietnam, Mr. Bush has now reached for the dreaded V-word. His critics are horrified, of course, even though they have been flinging the comparison around for years.

 

August 23, 2007
French signals
By Helle Dale
The French tend to be homebodies. They rather like to keep to themselves, and they prefer to spend their vacations in their country homes or in other parts of France. Even Frenchmen who live in villages have country cabins to which they repair in July and August for European-sized vacations.

 

August 02, 2007
Tasks at hand
By Helle Dale
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown came to Washington this week, a visit anticipated with much curiosity on this side of the Atlantic — and surely on the other as well. As difficult as it must have been to follow his predecessor — Tony Blair with whom President Bush had a close personal relationship — Mr. Brown pulled off a sterling performance. His statements on Iraq and Afghanistan were steady, supportive and measured, and he indicated a deep commitment to the "special relationship" between the United States and Britain.

 

July 26, 2007
Stopping Iran
By Helle Dale
The prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran is one of the nightmares facing the Middle East today. Iran has been working overtime to produce enough nuclear fuel for its first bomb, increasing the number of centrifuges needed to convert yellowcake to uranium hexaflouride gas, and according to the International Atomic Energy Agency it may have as many as 3,000 centrifuges up and running this summer. By the IAEA's estimate that would be enough for Iran to have completed a nuclear weapon in two years time. That means the international community does not have much time to prevent the outbreak of a nuclear arms race in the Middle East -- the most volatile, energy-rich region of the world.

 

July 12, 2007
Voices of America
By Helle Dale
It isn't exactly Walt Disney. In fact, the animation is primitive and the characters not likely to inspire a series of spin-off merchandise. Still, the Iranian cartoon TV version of American history — all told in 11 minutes — certainly knows how to get its point across that the United States is murderous, rapacious and to be feared.

 

July 05, 2007
The American experiment
By Helle Dale
The American experiment was unique and improbable in 1776, when Thomas Jefferson penned the Declaration of Independence and the American colonies defied Britain, the most powerful nation on earth at the time. As we look around the world at how difficult it is for democracy and freedom to take hold and flourish, America seems like a political miracle.

 

June 28, 2007
Brown vs. Cameron
By Helle Dale
The political landscape in Britain shifts this week with the rise of Gordon Brown to the premiership. For an event that has been anticipated for years, due to the long-standing political bargain between Mr. Brown and former Prime Minister Tony Blair, its contours are still widely debated here.

 

June 15, 2007
A place in the sun
By Helle Dale
Joseph Stalin said that the death of one man is a tragedy, the death of millions a statistic. What, then, does that make of the death of 100 million? Too much for the human mind to handle?

 

June 07, 2007
The G-8 Summit
By Helle Dale
There would be no news without conflict. So, it is understandable that the media is working overtime to portray the meeting of the leaders of the G-8, the major industrialized nations, as a kind of punch-drunk free-for-all.

 

May 31, 2007
Funding and teeth to back up Iraq
By Helle Dale
A general media rush has been on to mute any celebrations of the president's victory on funding for Iraq and Afghanistan. Heaven forbid that President Bush should actually get the credit for having won a significant battle on principle against an overweening Congress, attempting to legislate his government's military strategy.

 

May 24, 2007
Russia's threatening ways
By Helle Dale
If the shoe fits, wear it, as the saying goes. Maybe the same could be said about the jackboot.

 

May 17, 2007
U.S. and Britain
By Helle Dale
Americans love British politicians. To the distinguished company of Prime Ministers Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher, we can now add Tony Blair as one of most admired people on this side of the Atlantic.

 

May 10, 2007
Sarkozy's victory
By Helle Dale
Are we in for a new day in U.S.-European relations? Sunday's convincing victory by Nicolas Sarkozy in France's presidential election suggests as much. Mr. Sarkozy has been unabashedly pro-American in his campaign and his victory speech. "I want to issue an appeal to our American friends, to tell them that they can count on our friendship, which has been forged in the tragedies of history which we have faced together," he said on Sunday.

 

May 03, 2007
Voices of America
By Helle Dale
No matter what you choose to call our war with the forces of radical Islam, it is clear that the global landscape of public opinion regarding these events is highly complex. The challenge of navigating it is falls to the branches of the U.S. government whose task it is to win over hearts and minds in the Muslim world. How to deal with this challenge was the subject of intense discussion last week at a the Cantigny estate outside Chicago, which hosted "The Future of U.S. International Broadcasting."

 

April 19, 2007
The evil men do
By Helle Dale
Words seem so very inadequate, but they are unfortunately often all we have to express the grief, outrage and sympathy that well up when tragedies like Monday's massacre at Virginia Tech strike. The heart just goes out to the students and their parents, who sustained the worst loss, the greatest pain that can hit a human being. The tragedy that struck the parents of the Virginia Tech students is the tragedy of the entire nation.

 

April 12, 2007
Abjectdiplomacy
By Helle Dale
Recess is travel time in Washington, and Congressional Democrats have wasted no time launching their own new adventures. After all, they seem to be thinking, how hard can foreign policy be? The world is full of nice folks who want to talk to you if you belong to the party that is in opposition to the Bush administration. Unfortunately, the old adage about Washington having potentially 535 secretaries of state, in addition to the one in Foggy Bottom, seems to be proving all too true with the 110th Congress.

 

April 05, 2007
Danes amid Europeans
By Helle Dale
The 50th anniversary of the European Union passed with but modest notice here in Denmark, where unusually warm spring weather brought Danes out in droves to work in their gardens, drink beer and raise the red and white Danish flag against the backdrop of a sparkling blue sky. Yes, there were conferences and events at the Europa House in Copenhagen, followed by fireworks. And at the museum of ultramodern art, Arken, on the water, politicians gathered for a discussion of Europe's future. Still, the event bore no resemblance to the nationwide celebrations of Denmark's own Constitution Day in June.

 

March 22, 2007
Visa Reform: How to be Brave in a Brave New World
By Helle Dale and James Carafano
After the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, Americans became rightly concerned about two serious issues -- thwarting the international travel of terrorists and getting serious about enforcing U.S. immigration laws. Most of what was done immediately after 9/11 amounted to simply making it more difficult to travel to the United States from overseas.

 

March 22, 2007
Iraq's future
By Helle Dale
Let's get this straight. According to the various attempts by congressional Democrats to force President Bush to bring home the troops, the United States should withdraw from Iraq if the Maliki government fails to meet certain benchmarks reducing violence, raising troop numbers and making progress toward a political solution. That is, if the Iraqi government is not in a condition fit to govern the country, then we will pull out. On the other hand, if the Iraqi government lives up to our demands, functioning as it should, we will stay? Somewhere, somehow, this all got turned upside down.

 

March 15, 2007
U.S.-Latin America dance
By Helle Dale
"Too little, too late" is the mantra that has met President Bush's visit to Latin America from the foreign policy community here. Fairly typical was the op-ed in The Washington Post by Fareed Zakaria. "President Bush has done the right thing in going to Latin America... But Bush's new look at the region will not do much good. It's too little, too late."

 

March 08, 2007
Gore in the balance
By Helle Dale
Religious intolerance is associated in the minds of many today with Islamic radicalism. Yet, there is a Western variety on the rise that has to concern us greatly as well -- and it is not climate change orthodoxy. Challenge the belief that the Earth is warming dangerously due to human activity, or criticize any of its high priests, and the wrath of true believers will be visited upon you.

 

March 02, 2007
Salvaging the war in Iraq
By Helle Dale
We should be grateful that Washington political battles usually do not result in any fatalities. Were it otherwise, casualty figures for the next two years could undoubtedly be significant. The real bloodshed, however, is left for the Iraqis to live with as politicians here maneuver and debate how fast American troops can return home. In all, it is a pretty depressing time for those of us who believe that, having gotten into Iraq, the United States now has a responsibility to see the mission through.

 

February 22, 2007
Afghanistan a true test for NATO
By Helle Dale
While the attention of Washington is focused on Iraq, the other military front in the struggle against militant Islam is warming up. Afghanistan has until now shown better promise of success than Iraq. Yet there are clear signs that this spring will be an intensely challenging time for the Afghan government and for the NATO coalition forces operating to support it. We are being warned that a Taliban spring offensive is in the works, and how NATO responds will be crucial, both for the future of Afghanistan and for NATO as well.

 

February 15, 2007
Putin's ravings
By Helle Dale
Putin's ravings

 

February 08, 2007
Just the facts
By Helle Dale
As I braved the bitter cold and howling winds on Monday night, dragging our two reluctant dogs dressed in their overcoats out for their final walk of the day, fond thoughts of global warming presented themselves.

 

February 01, 2007
Iraq is no 'Nam
By Helle Dale
Comparisons between Vietnam and Iraq have long been a staple of critics of the Bush administration. The Washington Post, for instance, recently adorned the wide expanse of the top half of the Sunday Outlook section with the famous photo of the last U.S. helicopter to leave the rooftop of the embassy in Saigon. Is that how the United States is going to leave Iraq? Ignominious and defeated? That is certainly the implication and maybe even the hope of too many here in Washington.

 

January 31, 2007
Iraq is no 'Nam
By Helle Dale
Comparisons between Vietnam and Iraq have long been a staple of critics of the Bush administration. The Washington Post, for instance, recently adorned the wide expanse of the top half of the Sunday Outlook section with the famous photo of the last U.S. helicopter to leave the rooftop of the embassy in Saigon.

 

January 25, 2007
Visa reform
By Helle Dale
National security ought to be one issue where we can all agree. Unfortunately, that common ground is often not so easy to locate, as party politics and even divisions among liberals and conservatives among themselves take on a life of their own.

 

January 11, 2007
Post 9/11 legislation
By Helle Dale
Democrats are leaving no stone unturned to make the nation feel safer, now that they are in control of both houses of Congress. Or perhaps one should say no piece of paper unused.

 


2006 Commentary

December 28, 2006
Around the globe
By Helle Dale
How will we remember the politics of 2006? As the year Iraq troops got the better of John Kerry? Or the year Hugo Chavez invoked the devil at the United Nations? Newspapers pride themselves on being the first draft of history, so below is a little help for future historians. And Happy New Year 2007 to the faithful readers of The Washington Times.

 

December 21, 2006
Russia goes backward
By Helle Dale
The British are so squeamish. They are having the vapors just because Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko was poisoned in London with $10 million worth of polonium-210, a highly radioactive agent applied to the victim in something like 10 times the necessary dosage for lethality.

 

December 07, 2006
Hope for Afghan girls
By Helle Dale
Anyone who has watched the chilling documentary "Obsession: Radical Islam's War with the West" will recognize where the real front in the war against terrorism lies — the minds of children.

 

November 30, 2006
Rangel's slurs
By Helle Dale
Anyone who has firsthand experience of the excellent young men and women who volunteer for military service and perform so admirably under very difficult circumstances in Iraq will have a hard time recognizing what Rep. Charlie Rangel, incoming chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, is going on about.

 

November 23, 2006
Why NATO must evolve
By Helle Dale
Can NATO avoid rigor mortis? Pardon the pun, but as leaders of the NATO countries meet next week for their annual summit in Riga, Latvia, it is a reasonable question. The answer may lie in Afghanistan, where NATO is currently engaged in its first ever mission outside Europe. NATO countries are aware of this fact and much determination has been expressed to make it a success.

 

November 16, 2006
Midterms and Wars
By Helle Dale
The great Washington rush to judgment is on. After an election loss, there is always a time for recriminations, blood-letting and eventually regrouping. President Bush and congressional Republicans alike were stung by the loss of Congress, and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was soon after designated as the requisite human sacrifice under such circumstances. All of this drama is part and parcel of Washington.

 

November 02, 2006
Bush policies
By Helle Dale
With midterm elections less than one week away, foreign visitors to this town are asking, "What will a change of majority in Congress mean for U.S. foreign policy?"

 

October 26, 2006
America's image
By Helle Dale
It is easy, too easy in fact, to despair of efforts to change international public opinion of the United States when you look at some of the much publicized international polls.

 

October 19, 2006
Spiteful defiance
By Helle Dale
Some people always blame America first, as Jeanne Kirkpatrick memorably said at the Republican Convention in 1988. And they are at it again.

 

October 12, 2006
Dancing with Kim
By Helle Dale
Talk about prima donnas and drama queens. North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il again managed to get the world's attention and grab the front pages with his "nuclear" test on Sunday -- just as he did on the 4th of July when North Korea launched a missile test over the East Sea/Seaof Japan.

 

October 05, 2006
Balkan lessons
By Helle Dale
One of the most persuasive arguments why the United States cannot cut and run in Iraq is that a premature U.S. withdrawal would likely provoke civil war and ethnic cleansing on a scale that would make the Balkans pale by comparison.

 

September 28, 2006
Much ado at the U.N.
By Helle Dale
Just when you thought that the circus that is the U.N. General Assembly could not possibly get more ridiculous, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez demonstrate that there are yet depths to be plummeted.

 

September 21, 2006
European role reversal?
By Helle Dale
Much as the Bush administration has been criticized for unilateralism, the fact is that alliances remain.

 

September 14, 2006
In a 9/11 heartbeat
By Helle Dale
How can anyone argue that the world did not change on September 11? This week, the fifth anniversary, reflections suggest that the world has changed in many ways.

 

September 07, 2006
Missile defense
By Helle Dale
The news about the successful missile defense test conducted Friday by the Defense Department came at an opportune moment.

 

September 01, 2006
A reality check for Europe
By Helle Dale
In recent years, Europe has been looking for ways to take a leading role in world affairs. Lebanon may be furnishing the long-awaited opportunity for Europeans. But then again, if you look at Europe's record in the post-Cold War era, it may not.

 

August 24, 2006
Deceitful evolution
By Helle Dale
Just as Germans were congratulating themselves on having developed a healthy kind of patriotism, on display during the soccer World Cup, Nobel Prize-winning author Gunter Grass' revelation of his SS past brought the country back to a discussion of the Nazi era with a vengeance.

 

August 17, 2006
Undoing evil cells
By Helle Dale
Winchester, England. -- If the terrorist plot involving young Muslim Britons to blow up nine airliners with liquid explosives were not enough to spark some rethinking here in Britain among the Muslim community about their own role and responsibilities, it is hard to see what would be.

 

August 03, 2006
For better or worse
By Helle Dale
Elections used to be thought of as the gold standard of democracy. In recent times, however, it has become clear that voting itself is not enough, particularly as the willingness among politicians has grown to challenge the results. By forcing recount after recount in Florida, and by appealing the election result all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore beat a path that others have followed, sometimes for better, sometimes for worse.

 

July 27, 2006
Mideast realities
By Helle Dale
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke of creating a "new Middle East" during her ever-so-brief foray into Middle East shuttle diplomacy on Monday. It is a noble goal, and, as we watch the tragedy of the Lebanese civilian population being caught in the crossfire between Israel and Hezbollah, it is a goal that is surely highly desirable. It is also a goal that has become central to the democracy agenda of the Bush administration. But there are times when the rhetoric just seems too far from reality to make any sense, and this may be one of those times.

 

July 20, 2006
Olmert's course
By Helle Dale
What better illustration of the hopelessness of converting terrorist movements to political parties than the escalating violence, tending toward outright warfare, between Israel and Lebanon-based Hezbollah? And, yet, the world keeps hoping against hope that groups like Hezbollah, Hamas and the PLO can be transformed and absorbed by civilian, civilized society.

 

July 13, 2006
DPRK blackmail
By Helle Dale
North Korea's fanciful display of fireworks on July 4 has already backfired. How Kim Jong-il, the man in charge of this Stalinist concentration camp of a country, could imagine it would produce any other effect is a puzzle. In other words, Mr. Kim is about to learn the limits of blackmail — or at least he should. North Korea's somewhat pathetic show of force ought to be met at the negotiating table with a united front comprised of the five other parties of the six-party talks on North Korean nuclear proliferation and earn the country only tough consequences.

 

June 15, 2006
Destiny awaits
By Helle Dale
The unannounced visit of President Bush to Baghdad yesterday is the visible signal that the White House believes a turning point has been reached in Iraq. This would be good news not just for the Iraqis but for the Bush administration as well, which could definitely use some positive coverage of the war. In an election year, Iraqi and American politics have become inextricably intertwined.

 

June 08, 2006
Wayward thinking
By Helle Dale
It would seem a simple yet fundamental cornerstone of a successful foreign policy that you punish your enemies and reward your friends. Another would be that you should divide your enemies and unite your friends. In the strange ways of Washington, however, we have been turning these axioms upside down. The result is extraordinary bitterness among some nations that have been good friends and allies of the United States.

 

June 01, 2006
Blair and Bush
By Helle Dale
Among the questions at last week's news conference with President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair was the inevitable invitation to Mr. Blair to spill the beans on this own retirement.

 

May 26, 2006
Iraqi progress
By Helle Dale
Looking at the invariably mixed news from Iraq and the impatience here at home with the war now in its fourth year, words from an old patriotic song comes to mind, "Over there."