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WEDNESDAY 09.21

FOREIGN POLICY'S TAKE ON THE PRESIDENTIAL RACE

Terror Politics

"A nation ringed by walls would only imprison itself." President Obama was addressing the United Nations General Assembly, but really, he spoke to Republican nominee Donald Trump, and those attracted to an apocalyptic vision of a world in which the United States and other countries retreat behind barriers of isolationism, trade tariffs, immigration control, and class. He represents a threat to the world order, Obama argued — and, it just so happens, his legacy. When bombs rocked New York, where Obama spoke, just a few days before, and authorities arrested and charged a U.S. citizen of Afghan descent, both Trump and Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton sharpened their argument about fitness to be commander-in-chief. My opponent is endangering you, both said, and only I can make you safe. Even in an election marked by terrorist attacks across the world and in the United States, elevating national security as a campaign issue, their language was stark. The ratcheting up of fearsome rhetoric is unlikely to fade heading into the first debate and the final weeks of both the election and Obama's presidency. To go by the campaign-trail rhetoric, what lies in store feels very far from hope.

Trump Gives Ukraine Cold Shoulder in New York

Petro Poroshenko sent a request to meet both U.S. presidential candidates. But only Clinton has sat down with the Ukrainian president.

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MOLLY O'TOOLE, REID STANDISH

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'A Nation Ringed by Walls Would Only Imprison Itself'

In his final U.N. address, President Obama pleads with world leaders to keep global borders, markets, and minds open.

COLUM LYNCH

JOHN HUDSON

As the 2016 election fast approaches, President Barack Obama increasingly is looking to — and fighting for — his legacy. He used his last speech before the United Nations to make an impassioned plea for an open world order — even as walls rise against refugees, protectionism makes a comeback, and cold wars with authoritarian states heat up.

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Jensen shorts

Despite Bombings, Advocates Still Hope for More Visas for Afghan Interpreters

A program to speed visas for Afghan interpreters working for U.S. troops during the war may be under threat after New York's bomb attack by a U.S. citizen with Afghan roots.

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KAVITHA SURANA

Trump Invites Himself to Egypt Despite Wanting to Ban Muslims From the U.S.

The Republican nominee takes another swing at being a statesman by meeting with Cairo's controversial leader.

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MOLLY O'TOOLE

"Skittles are candy. Refugees are people."

Wrigley, the company that makes Skittles, responding to Donald Trump, Jr. Trump tweeted an image of a bowl of the candy with a caption that read: "If I had a bowl of skittles and I told you just three would kill you. Would you take a handful? That's our Syrian refugee problem." The image he used, without permission, was a photograph taken by a refugee.



Gwokto La'Kitgum
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"Even a small dog can piss on a tall building" Jim Hightower


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