Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Friday 25 September 2015

This week on Foreign Affairs
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Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a meeting with journalists after a live broadcast nationwide call-in in Moscow, April 16, 2015.Putin's Philosopher
Ivan Ilyin and the Ideology of Moscow's Rule
By Anton Barbashin and Hannah Thoburn
Ilyin has also received a great deal of attention from seemingly polar opposite groups within Russian society. The Putin administration often quotes him. Members of the Russian Orthodox Church have praised him as a “religious philosopher” who “preached about the spiritual renewal and rebirth of Russia.” And a leader of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation called him someone who “made a very significant contribution to the development of the Russian state ideology of patriotism.” So, who is Mr. Ilyin?
 
 
An Iraqi Shiite fighterIraq in Pieces
Breaking Up to Stay Together
By Ali Khedery
Today the Iraqi army has all but collapsed, Shiite militants who have sworn allegiance to Iran’s supreme leader operate with impunity, and the Islamic State controls more than a third of Iraq and half of Syria. It is time for Washington to abandon the idea of a reunified Iraq within artificial borders. Self-determination for the various parts of Iraq and Syria represents the best chance of containing the sectarian violence and protecting the remainder of the Middle East from still further chaos.
 
 
Europe's Hungary Problem
Viktor Orban Flouts the Union
By R. Daniel Kelemen
As Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has consolidated power and built an increasingly authoritarian regime, he has thumbed his nose at the European Union—and mostly gotten away with it. Over the past few years, Orban has been a mild embarrassment for the union, but in his callous and shortsighted reaction to the ongoing refugee crisis, he has become a disgrace.
 
 
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Global SummitryOxford University Press launches new journal, Global Summitry: Politics, Economics, and Law in International Governance
From Global Summitry’s inaugural issue, “International Migration and Global Governance” discusses current trends in international migration and highlights the need for global governance of international migration. The article explores reasons why this form of global governance has lagged behind others and reviews the steps that have been taken since the early twentieth century to foster greater international cooperation. Read now
 
 
A man sits next to sheep at a market in Ankara, October 11, 2013.Thoroughly Modern Muslim
Celebrating Eid In Istanbul
By Nick Danforth
Today, many in Turkey will celebrate Eid by purchasing sheep or cows, slaughtering them, and distributing the meat to the poor. Meanwhile, many members of Turkey’s self-consciously Western elite will participate in their own tradition: denouncing the whole thing as barbaric. Alongside these two basic positions, however, there are a host of more surprising arguments, many put forward by pro-sacrifice conservatives eager to claim the modernist high ground.
 
 
Russia's President Vladimir Putin and his Egyptian counterpart Abdel Fattah al-Sisi attend a welcoming ceremony onboard guided missile cruiser Moskva at the Black Sea port of Sochi, August 12, 2014.Putin's Damascus Steal
How Russia Got Ahead in the Middle East 
By Dmitry Adamsky
Once more, the Kremlin is increasingly assertive in the Middle East, and once more, it has surprised the West. Emboldened by its perceived success in addressing regional challenges and capitalizing on opportunities, it has gotten closer than ever to its key diplomatic objective: acquiring a regional status on par with Washington’s.