New York Times, Editorials, December 14, 2009

Europe and Afghanistan
European countries must join America, which has made disproportionate sacrifices, in what is, emphatically, a common fight in Afghanistan.

Can We Afford It?

The argument that the nation cannot afford health care reform is at best disingenuous; the pending bills would actually reduce deficits.

To Beat Al Qaeda, Look to the East

The key in the Afghan-Pakistani area, as in Southeast Asia, is to use local customs and networks to our advantage.

Japan's Year in Words

This year's selection of most popular Japanese phrases reflects a country battling hard times and fighting the flu.
 
Dubai, the brashest of the seven emirates, is facing something of a midlife crisis. Lost is the blind optimism of its youth. But can the dream be reinvented?

Gone With the Windfall

Will Britain’s bonus tax make banking boring — as it should be?
Columns

Japanese Obsessions

This comfortable, perfectionist society of narrowed ambition leads humanity's rush into isolating forms of electronic fixation.

Disaster and Denial

The Republican Party won’t face up to the reality of what happened to the U.S. economy. So it’s up to the Democrats.

Prisons of Our Own Making

Conservatives need to take ownership of prison reform, and correct the system they helped build.

Viewpoints, December 14, 2009

The Taxi Driver Who Drove Us to War 
Justin Raimondo on how we were lied into Iraq
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The Strange Consensus on Obama's Nobel Address  by Glenn Greenwald

The Dust Bowl of Babylon  by Martin Chulov

Rearranging the Letters in Obama's 'Just War' Theory  by Thomas L. Knapp

The Af-Pak Train Wreck  by Conn Hallinan

Prussia in Palestine  by Uri Avnery

The Land Mines Obama Won't Touch  by Bill Moyers and Michael Winship