- Michael Mazza on the Importance of Deterring North Korea "War on the Korean peninsula is not a distant possibility," warns The Los Angeles Times contributor. Thus far, South Korea has acted with "noble restraint"
towards their belligerent neighbor. But if the U.S. continues to
withdraw infantry and armaments from South Korea and
Japan, it only emboldens Kim Jong Il. At the beginning
of the decade the U.S. had 27,500 troops in South Korea, that number has
been reduced to 20,000. Likewise--due to the U.S.-Japan Roadmap for
Realignment Implementation--8,000 marines are scheduled to move from
Okinawa to Guam. "The road map should be scrapped," writes Mazza. As of
now America is "ill-prepared" for a war on the peninsula, which makes a
conflict "more likely to occur and less likely to end quickly."
- Dick
Durbin on the Deficit Reduction Plan When the "National Commission on
Fiscal Responsibility and Reform gathers to consider a plan to bring our
national debt under control, I will be voting yes," writes the
Democratic senator in The Chicago Tribune.
The plan, which cuts federal spending while raising revenues, is "not
perfect," Durbin concedes. It will, however,"dramatically" work to
reduce the federal deficit and put Americans back to work. The plan will implement across-the-board cuts inducing cutting defense and
non-defense funds and reducing the federal workforce. To raise revenue,
the gas tax will be increased to pay for infrastructure and mass
transit, and the tax code will be reexamined in order to reduce tax
earmarks. Durbin emphasizes that Social
Security will be protected by an "actuarially sound program for an
additional 75 years," although the retirement age will be raised one
year to age 68. "I also insisted on two things to spark the economy,"
Durbin writes: "a payroll tax holiday that can create up to 900,000 jobs
and a longer-term investment of $100 billion in infrastructure,
education and research and development."
- Bruce Schneier on Avoiding a Cyberwar Serious efforts are needed to prevent the escalation
of a potential cyberwar, argues Bruce Schneier in The Financial Times.
Schneier points out that the real danger is the inability to pinpoint
the beginning, end, and even the parties of a cyberwar--"not only because
such attacks are often impossible to trace, but because we have no clear
definitions of what a cyberwar actually is." Though countries cannot be
stopped from developing digital weapons, rules can be set to reign in
cyber attacks and clarify attacks' source in
order to prevent all out cyberwar. "A first step would be a hotline
between the world's cyber commands, modelled after similar hotlines
among nuclear commands. This would at least allow governments to talk to
each other, rather than guess where an attack came from" proposes
Schneier. "More difficult, but more important, are new cyberwar
treaties. These could stipulate a no first use policy, outlaw unaimed
weapons, or mandate weapons that self-destruct at the end of
hostilities. The Geneva Conventions need to be updated too." Cyber
weapons already exist and "beg to be used" writes Schneier, which is why
enforcing regulations should at least be attempted. "Otherwise it is
only a matter of time before something big happens: perhaps by the rash
accidents of a low level military officer, perhaps by a non-state actor,
perhaps by accident. And if the target nation retaliates, we could
actually find ourselves in a cyberwar."
- Jonathan Guthrie on America the Benign Far from being a game-changer, The Financial Times columnist says the new WikiLeaks dump shows things
are fairly orderly on the geopolitical stage, or at least predictable.
It's a mystery to Guthrie why Julian Assange considers himself a hunted
man for bringing to the public's attention that "Prince Andrew is
passionate about promoting British exports" and "the chancellor of
Germany, a nation famed for the literalism of its inhabitants' thought
processes, is not a very imaginative person." In the absence of graphic
accounts of super-secret alien autopsies, the cables remind Guthrie why
he likes America. WikiLeaks, he argues, "confirm the essential benignity
of the US." The writers of the cables remind Guthrie of "the
mid-western tourist that Notebook recently encountered on the London
Underground... instructing his bonny, big-boned kids to 'make like
you're locals, guys.'"
- Conor Williams on the Kalamazoo Stimulus Plan In his debut column,
the winner of The Washington Post's Next Great Pundit contest writes
that those looking for ways to reinvigorate the economy can take hope in the
successes of his hometown of Kalamazoo, Michigan. When it comes to
rebounding from economic turmoil, Williams notes Kalamazoo "had a head
start, because the economic downturn came early to southwestern
Michigan ... And Kalamazoo public schools were among the victims." But
thanks to an anonymous grant from local citizens, the city was able to a
foundation (The Kalamazoo Promise) that offers the city's high school
graduates full tuition to any of Michigan's public colleges and
universities. The goal was to "revitalize the schools, but also the
local economy and community," and it has succeeded. "In the Promise's
first two years, real estate values rose by 8 to 10 percent (compared to
an average statewide loss of 2 percent)." The brain drain has been
halted, and making college possible for everyone wound up changing the "district's guiding objective" in a way that reformed the entire school system. While it's not a program every town can hope to implement,
Williams believes it typifies the "sort of local response to education
and economic challenges is exactly what we need right now."
Want to add to this story? Let us know in comments
or send an email to the authors at
cdickson at theatlantic dot com, rgustini at theatlantic dot com or ehayden at nationaljournal dot com.
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