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Topic: Leon Hadar


  
  Leon Hadar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leon T. Hadar is a research fellow in foreign policy studies, specializing in foreign policy, international trade, the Middle East, and South and East Asia.
In addition, Hadar has taught at American University and Mount Vernon College-where he served as director of international studies-at the Institute on East-West Security Studies in New York, and at the Center for International Development and Conflict Management at the University of Maryland, College Park.
Hadar is a graduate of Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Leon_Hadar   (237 words)

  
 VOA News Report
Leon Hadar of the CATO Institute agrees the use of chemical weapons is not likely.
Hadar also says to expect a relatively short war with a special effort to prevent attacks on civilians in order to reduce the number of casualties.
But analyst Leon Hadar says the real concern is in India, which may see the war as an opportunity to settle the Kashmir dispute with Pakistan, with the risk of nuclear war breaking out.
www.globalsecurity.org /wmd/library/news/iraq/2003/iraq-030131-32182b69.htm   (1244 words)

  
 The Globalist | Biography of Leon T. Hadar   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Leon T. Hadar is a research fellow in foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute, where he analyzes international politics and economics with a special focus on the Middle East and East Asia.
Hadar is the former United Nations bureau chief for the Jerusalem Post and is currently the Washington correspondent for the Singapore Business Times.
Leon T. Hadar, a dual citizen of the United States and Israel, is a graduate of Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
www.theglobalist.com /DBWeb/AuthorBiography.aspx?AuthorId=402   (256 words)

  
 In the Wake of War: Geo-strategy, Terrorism, Oil Markets, and Domestic Politics   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
LEON T. I think that the axis of evil strategy and the nuclear component I think in the long run all of this is going to collapse.
Leon, would you like to start with a response and then perhaps, Ian, I think you have some views on this, too and Frank perhaps as well.
LEON T. Well, I think that under any scenario, including what I call the user friendly Saddam Hussein, which I really meant a military coup that might take place under certain circumstances, I think that's a realistic option that we can envision that.
www.mepc.org /public_asp/forums_chcs/31.asp   (14889 words)

  
 Iran Nuclear Program: Analysts Argue Nature of Regime Poses Higher Risk
Leon Hadar, a foreign policy analyst at Washington's CATO Institute, says focusing too much on Iran's nuclear potential blurs a larger picture.
Hadar notes that Iran is in a rough neighborhood of nuclear armed powers: India, Pakistan, Russia, Israel and now the United States in Iraq.
Leon Hadar cites the recommendation of former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and former CIA Director Robert Gates that the United States and Iran avoid any grand bargain and work incrementally on key issues like nuclear weapons.
quickstart.clari.net /voa/art/dk/2004-11-29-voa27.html   (729 words)

  
 Forums - LA Times Analyst Says Pakistan Should Top Axis of Evil   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Leon T. Hadar, currently the Washington correspondent for the Singapore Business Times, is also a research fellow in foreign policy studies at the prestigious Washington-based CATO Institute.
Leon Hader, a graduate of Hebrew University in Jerusalem, a professorial lecturer, is a former United Nation's correspondent for the Jerusalem Post.
Leon T. Hadar is too much dependent on, 'relatively cheap online Google search' as he calls it, not realizing that most of the informatuion there has been planted by thousands of Indian IT-coolies mustered by the Indian rulers just for that purpose.
www.satribune.com /thread.jsp?forum=3&thread=1601   (2790 words)

  
 article/print
In Sandstorm, Leon Hadar, a foreign-policy analyst at the Cato Institute, launches a frontal assault on the several orthodoxies constituting the citadel of U.S. policy in the Middle East.
Hadar’s chief purpose is to discredit what he calls the Middle East Paradigm, to which virtually the entire American foreign-policy establishment subscribes as if to holy writ.
This third proposition, according to Hadar, is a moral one, reflecting America’s commitment to ensuring the survival and security of the Jewish state.
www.amconmag.com /2005_08_01/print/articleprint2.html   (1227 words)

  
 In Search of a New Middle Eastern Paradigm - by Alan Bock
It was Leon who first laid out for me what I had long suspected through general knowledge but hadn't put into precisely those terms.
Besides being a helpful source for me, Leon Hadar has also been a prolific writer, appearing often on Antiwar.com and LewRockwell.com, as well as writing insightful policy papers for Cato and pieces for magazines.
Leon Hadar argues that this essential paradigm has been accepted not only by U.S. neoconservatives, who have come to dominate policy in the wake of 9/11, but by liberal internationalists and conservative and liberal realists as well.
www.antiwar.org /bock/?articleid=6665   (1837 words)

  
 "WAR in the MIDDLE EAST: DESERT STORM II?"
LEON HADAR: We are committed today to the Saudis in the same way that we were committed to the Iranians.
NARRATOR: Leon Hadar is a former UN bureau chief for the Jerusalem Post and author of "Quagmire: America in the Middle East." He teaches at the School of International Service at American University in Washington, D.C. Chairman Hamilton notes that the US military is ready to ride to the rescue.
HADAR: There are too many players in Washington and in the region that are interested in maintaining the status quo and they are going to put a lot of pressure on the administration to continue with that.
www.cdi.org /adm/Transcripts/625   (3678 words)

  
 Ariga:5759:Letter From Washington: by Leon Hadar The Republican Elephant and the Netanyahu Problem (or) Bidding ...
Letter From Washington: by Leon Hadar The Republican Elephant And the Netanyahu Problem (Or) Bidding Farewell To Those FOBs (Friends Of "Bibi") I've always been a international-news buff.
At a very early age, growing-up in Israel during the 1960's, I was fascinated by U.S. political news and followed with great interest the LBJ-Goldwater presidential race, celebrating the electoral victories of the "pro-Israeli" Johnson and the defeat of the "anti-Semite" Barry Goldwater (whom, I learned a few years later, was of Jewish extraction).
Leon Hadar is a veteran correspondent based in the U.S. reporting on American Jewish affairs for Israeli and other newspapers.
www.ariga.com /5759/leon001.htm   (646 words)

  
 "WHO's the ENEMY NOW?"
Leon Hadar is an Israeli-born American specialist on the Middle East and former correspondent for the Jerusalem Post.
HADAR: I think the American media in this post-cold war era has joined other members of the foreign policy establishment in the search for a convenient threat, for a plot to explain the political instability and the problems in the world.
HADAR: It is in American national interests to open a dialogue with Iran and to try to establish, first of all, trade relationship and, later on, diplomatic relationship with that country.
www.cdi.org /adm/Transcripts/651   (3753 words)

  
 U-S AND INDONESIA
But in an analysis for the Cato Institute, Leon Hadar argues that Indonesia is moving toward a more open democracy and a kind of federalism that may keep it from fragmenting.
In addition to that, we created incentives for players in the region, including some of the Southeast Asian countries, to recognize that we are not going to be there all the time to deal with their problems.
Hadar concedes Indonesia could still fall apart if regions like Aceh are not fairly treated.
www.globalsecurity.org /military/library/news/2000/04/000406-indo2.htm   (630 words)

  
 News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
This is not speculation," The Daily Times quoted Leon Hadar as saying.
Hadar said that some evidence suggests that some Pakistani nuclear scientists are maintaining ties with al-Qaeda and other extremist Islamic groups.
According to the paper, Hadar wrote: "At the same time, some members of the Pakistani security forces continue to provide assistance to Islamic militants in Kashmir.
www.cuttingedge.org /news_updates/nz1347.htm   (431 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Books: Sandstorm: Policy Failure in the Middle East   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
The way forward for Hadar is "constructive disengagement," exiting the Middle East and, instead, relying on Latin American oil imports, and establishing a European Union-led regional balance of power system.
True to form, he also shares more alarming prognostications if the U.S. forges onward in Iraq, including the specter of a crippling blow to the world's only superpower if Arab oil producers decide to trade in their greenbacks for euros, thereby shattering the dollar-driven international economy.
Hadar provides a sweeping reexamination of the conceptual bases of American policy and proposes a strategy of "constructive disengagement" from the region, a policy of benign neglect as a way of promoting the interests of the United States as well as those of the people
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/1403967245   (381 words)

  
 Multipolar's the Way to Go for US - by Leon Hadar
Multipolar's the Way to Go for US - by Leon Hadar
Multipolar's the Way to Go for US by Leon Hadar
Leon Hadar is the author of the forthcoming Sandstorm: Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan).
antiwar.com /hadar   (1162 words)

  
 OA Online Editorials   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
"This re-energizes the peace process," said Leon Hadar, who was born in Israel, is an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and is author of "Quagmire: America in the Middle East." When Barak takes office over the next couple of days, he said, "The Israel-Palestinian talks will be re-started.
With peace prospects renewed, Hadar even thinks that Israel’s difficulties with Syria and Lebanon could become part of the peace equation.
For Hadar, the hope for peace in the region also means the hope for greater economic development.
www.oaoa.com /columns/edit051999.htm   (661 words)

  
 The American Scene
Note that Doug Bandow is identified not as a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, which he is, but as a "Former Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan" in order to make the Coalition appear to include a group it does not: Reaganite conservatives and Republicans.
(Leon Hadar's biography at The Globalist explains that Mr.
Hadar helped launch the Coalition with the aim of "countering the neoconservative imperial agenda.")
www.theamericanscene.com /2003/10/cato-and-world-next-week-something.asp   (545 words)

  
 Alibris: Leon T Hadar
Leon Hadar says no in this incisive book, Quagmire: America in the Middle East.
Hadar, a former UN bureau chief for the Jerusalem Post who teaches political science at the...
Hadar provides a sweeping reexamination of the conceptual bases of American policy and proposes a strategy of...
www.alibris.com /search/books/author/Leon_T_Hadar   (204 words)

  
 The Cato Institute - Online Bookstore: Product Details
Hadar concludes that it is time for the United States to disengage from the region and adopt a policy of benign neglect.
Leon T. Hadar is a fellow of the Cato Institute, the Washington bureau chief of The Business Times of Singapore and a professorial lecturer at American University.
"Leon Hadar's highly readable book is a sweeping, provocative, and powerful frontal assault on U.S. Middle East policy."
www.catostore.org /index.asp?fa=ProductDetails&method=cats&scid=19&pid=144084   (222 words)

  
 [casi] Mending the U.S.-European Rift over the Middle East
Mending the U.S.-European Rift over the Middle East by Leon T. Hadar _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Leon T. Hadar is a research fellow in foreign policy studies with the Cato Institute and author of Quagmire: America in the Middle East.
This argument is developed in Leon T. Hadar, "The Persian Gulf: Iraq and the Post-Cold War Order," in The Persian Gulf after the Cold War, ed.
I first broached the subject of Israel's accession to the EU in an op-ed published in May 2003; see Leon Hadar, "Iraq and Israel in the EU: Peace through Accession?" In the National Interest, May 21, 2003, www.inthenationalinterest.com/Articles/ Vol2Issue 19/vol2issue19hadar.html.
www.casi.org.uk /discuss/2003/msg04227.html   (10086 words)

  
 Localizing the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict [Free Republic]
All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
Leon Hadar is a Cato Institute research fellow in foreign policy studies and the author of Quagmire: America in the Middle East.
It's difficult to say goodbye to old friends, be they your high school pals or the characters on a favorite television sit-com.
www.freerepublic.com /forum/a398e04290374.htm   (1165 words)

  
 The Globalist | Global Politics -- The Middle East: Europe’s Mexico
Based on geographic proximity and growing economic relations, the Middle East may be considered Europe’s Mexico.
Leon Hadar explores the economic dimensions — and prospects — of that relationship.
Little known though it is, the EU has already formed its own version of the North American Free Trade Agreement in the Middle East — in the form of the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership.
www.mafhoum.com /press6/162E14.htm   (1314 words)

  
 [No title]
In fact, in the period since the attacks of 9/11 the isolationist paleocons have made the "Trotskyist neocon" assertion one of their main weapons in the ongoing feud.
The most extreme paleocons, who flirt dangerously with outright anti-Semitism, claim not only that neoconservatism is derivative of Trotskyism but that a "cabal of Jewish neocons" is manipulating US foreign policy and actually implementing Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution from the White House.
It is also worth noting that the justifications were accompanied by warnings from Trotsky that such "shameful" military actions on the part of the Stalinist bureaucracy would end up harming the "degenerated workers' state".
www.enterstageright.com /archive/articles/0304/0304neocontrot.txt   (3779 words)

  
 Powell's Books - Current Affairs
Thousands more narrowly escaped, their survival a result of eerily prescient spur-of-the-moment decisions, acts of superhuman...
“Leon Hadar's fine book Sandstorm starkly outlines differing U.S. and European interests in the Middle East.
His prescription for U.S. disengagement from the region is sound, well argued, and based on an incisive reading of...
www.powells.com /usedbooks/CurrentAffairs.4.html   (551 words)

  
 Jihad: War, Terrorism, and Peace in Islam
Political Islam: Beyond the Green Menace This article, by one of the top non-Muslim scholars of contemporary Islam, John Esposito, asserts that Islam and Islamic fundamentalism need not be militantly extremist.
The "Green Peril": Creating the Islamic Fundamentalist Threat is a lengthy article written by Leon T.
Hadar, a former bureau chief of the Jerusalem Post.
www.uga.edu /islam/jihad.html   (2653 words)

  
 GN Online: US moderates should stay the course
Scholars, such as John Esposito and Leon Hadar, believed that Islam is a key component of the popular culture in the Middle East and that it cannot be ignored merely because some in the West do not like this fact.
These scholars and others have, to some extent, influenced the policy of the Clinton administration towards the Islamists and hence served American interests in the Middle East.
Leon Hadar argued for the promotion of political reform, to distance from the despotic regimes of the Middle East and cooperative relations with Islamists on the grounds that should they "come to power, they would not direct their wrath against Washington".
www.gulf-news.com /Articles/opinion.asp?ArticleID=166758   (793 words)

  
 DBLP: Hadar Ziv
Yuewei Zhou, Hadar Ziv, Debra J. Richardson: Towards A Practical Approach to Test Aspect-Oriented Software.
Hadar Ziv, Debra J. Richardson: Constructing Bayesian-network models of software testing and maintenance uncertainties.
Hadar Ziv, Leon J. Osterweil: Research Issues in the Intersection of Hypertext and Software Development Environments.
www.informatik.uni-trier.de /~ley/db/indices/a-tree/z/Ziv:Hadar.html   (90 words)

  
 Leon T. Hadar on biased coverage of the Middle East in U.S. newspapers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Leon T. Hadar on biased coverage of the Middle East in U.S. newspapers
I am amazed sometimes that, even in this age of the internet, with Ha’aretz and other Israeli newspapers maintaining English-language websites and cable news networks broadcasting around the clock, for many American Jews (and for many Christian evangelicals), Israel still remains a fantasy—and they would like to keep it that way.
Leon T. Hadar is the former New York correspondent for the Jerusalem Post and the author of Quagmire: America in the Middle East.
www.chroniclesmagazine.org /Chronicles/June2004/0604Hadar.html   (1537 words)

  
 Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy
Leon Hadar explains that it's not as far-fetched as it might sound.
Hussein is one in a long line of dictators who held their fractious countries together by force.
He is the author of the forthcoming book, Sandstorm: American Blindness in the Middle East.
www.realisticforeignpolicy.org /archives/2004/06/are_we_betterof.php   (819 words)

  
 Leon T Hadar   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Leon Trotsky Sarah Lovell - Leon Trotsky Speaks
Leon VandeCreek Thomas L Jackson Samuel Knapp - Innovations in Clincial Practice: A Source Book
leon hadar eon lon len leo leont thadar adar hdar haar hadr hada t
www.rarebooksfinder.com /145503_leon-t-hadar.html   (63 words)

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