FOREIGNAFFAIRS i( I
J
2Japan Is BackA Conversation With Shinzo Abe
18Mutual Assured ProductionWhy Trade Will Limit Conflict Between China and JapanRichard Katz
25Fake It Till You Make ItThe Good News About China's Knockoff EconomyKal Raustiala and Christopher Sprigman
32Why Drones WorkThe Case for Washington's Weapon of ChoiceDaniel Byman
44Why Drones FailWhen Tactics Drive StrategyAudrey Kurth Cronin
Volume 92, Number 4
COMMENTS
Beijing's Brand Ambassador 10
A Conversation With Cui Tiankai
ESSAYS
July/August 2013
ON FOREIGNAFFAIRS.COMR- I Jonathan Mercer on O> Michael Koplow on how th Amrita Narlikar andreputation and credibility Israel and Turkey over- Dan Kim on the falsein international politics. carne their differences. promise of fair trade.
The Road to D-Day
55
Behind the Battle That Won the WarRick Atkinson
The Coming Arctic BoomAs the Ice Melts, the Region Heats UpScott Borgerson
Syria's CollapseAnd How Washington Can Stop ItAndrew j Tabler
Cuba After Communism
101
The Economic Reforms That Are Transformin ig the IslandJulia E. Sweig and Michael J. Bustamante
The War of Law 115How New International taw Undermines Democratic SovereigntyJon Kyl, Douglas J. Feith, and John Fonte
In Defense of Citizens UnitedWhy Campaign Finance Reform Threatens American DemocracyGlenn Hubbard and Tim Kane
The Next EuropeToward a Federal UnionNicolas Berggruen and Nathan Gardels
July/August 2013
76
90
126
134
The Rise of Mexico's Self-Defense Forces 1 f: its! r 143
Vigilante Justice South of the BorderPatricio Asfura-Heim and Ralph Espach
REVIEWS & RESPONSESLesser Israel
152
How Jewish Extremism Threatens ZionismJeffrey Goldberg
The Second Great Depression 159Why the Economic Crisis Is Worse Than You Think
Bradford DeLong
The Myth of the Omnipotent Central Banker 166
Monetary Policy and Its LimitsAdam S. Posen
The Frankfurt School at War 171The Marxists Who Explained the Nazis to WashingtonWilliam E. Scheuerman
Pyongyang Perseveres 177
Why Washington Should Learn to Work With North KoreaJohn Delury
Letters to the Editor 183
"Foreign Affairs . will tolerate vide differences of opinion. Its articles will not represent any consensusof beliefs. What is demanded of them is that they shall be competent and well informed, representing honestopinions seriously held and convincingly expressed. . . . It does not accept responsibility for the views in anyarticles, signed or unsigned, which appear in its pages. What it does accept is the responsibility for givingthem a chance to appear."
Archibald Cary Coolidge, Founding EditorVolume 1, Number 1 • September 1922
July/August 2013
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