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Diplomatic Dispatches




Charles Wolfson has been covering the State Department for CBS News for six years. The veteran news producer and former chief of the Tel Aviv bureau offers analysis and insight on a variety of thorny foreign policy issues.








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href="227577.story"> How Powerful Is Saddam Still?

For some, why Iraq's Saddam Hussein remains in power 10 years after the Gulf War, is a perplexing question. Just how effective has U.S. policy been?







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href="225303.story"> Can It Still Be Done?

Though the Camp David summit ended without an agreement, it may not be too late for a deal - even with the September deadline looming.







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href="215092.story"> Camp David Reporter's (Blank) Notebook

Aside from trips to the "boys" and "girls" rooms, snacking on homemade donuts or playing computer solitaire, there's little for reporters covering the Camp David talks to do but sit and wait.








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href="213925.story">Camp David II: What's At Stake


Most observers predict the Camp David summit will produce some version of a so-called Framework Agreement which addresses all issues -- Jerusalem, territory, refugees and security -- but may not cover every detail.






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href="212506.story">Lots Of Risks To The Summit

The next Middle East peace summit could be make-or-break for all three of the leaders involved: President Clinton is running out of time, and Barak and Arafat are running out of support.






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Chilly diplomatic relations between Cuba and the United States will likely not be warmed by the Elian Gonzalez case.







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href="207852.story"> A Rogue By Any Other Name

Countries who do things the U.S. doesn't like used to be called "rogue states." Now they're "states of concern." It seems semantics are a big part of statesmanship for America's foreign servants.







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href="205073.story">Syria's Real Power Brokers

A small group of barons from the minority Alawite community are calling the shots in Syria now that Bashar Assad has succeeded his father. One big difference between father and son: Bashar can smile.





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href="203693.story"> We Say/They Say

Human rights? Progress? When it comes to China-U.S. relations, agreeing to what the words mean may be the hardest task yet.











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href="201506.story"> Women 2000: Beijing 5

Women from around the world measure their progress at the first major U.N. women's conference in five years.
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href="194193.story"> Caution Versus Chaos

A broken cease-fire in Sierra Leone threatens a restart of a brutal civil war. Why isn't the U.S. doing more? Because, diplomats say, peace-making takes a lot of time to do.




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href="192556.story"> The Business of Diplomacy is Business

Think handing out visas and negotiating treaties is all America's foreign service does abroad? Think again. As this Diplomatic Dispatch reports, money matters…a lot.



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href="189069.story">Terrorism Report: We Were Lucky

State Department officials realize last year could have been much worse than it was. In fact, 1999 was actually pretty good, with only five Americans killed by terrorism and no major attacks.










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href="189069.story"> Cat and Mouse on Cuban Visas

Separate from the public furor over the government seizure of Elian Gonzalez, two governments wrangled for days over Juan Miguel Gonzalez’s effort to get four of his son’s Cuban playmates into the United States.







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href="185287.story"> War Famine = Catastrophe in Africa

Fighting between Ethiopia and Eritrea combined with severe drought in the region have created a catastrophe in the making—the possibility of famine for 8 million people.






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href="183735.story">Middle East Maneuvers

Israeli and Palestinian negotiators met in Washington, striving to find common ground. But peace will require leadersnot diplomats, and Ehud Barak has recently indicated that construction on the Golan Heights is to resume.







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href="181668.story"> Elian's International Impact

The State Department explains why it wants to see Elian Gonzalez back with his father in Cuba—so that American children in foreign lands can come home, too.







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href="180346.story">Tracking Balkans War Criminals

The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has been slowly zeroing in on its targets.






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href="178790.story">It's About The Kid, Not Cuba

Maybe the Elian Gonzalez saga will bring the governments of the United States and Cuba together. Maybe a six-year-old boy could help close a forty-year wound. Or, maybe not.






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href="169159.story">Averting Famine in The Horn of Africa

After the U.S. provided flood relief to Mozambique, the Clinton Administration is taking steps to prevent a potentially disastrous famine from striking southern Africa.







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href="173521.story">Big News, But A Tiny Step For U.S., Iran

CBS News' Charles Wolfson looks at the growing friendship between the United States and Iran—and the massive challenges that remain before these two often bitter enemies can claim to be friends.







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href="170720.story">Peace Back on Track...Again

Middle East rivals have agreed to talks. But the talks will produce almost nothing. So is this progress? Yes...and no.







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href="167861.story">Selling Foreign Policy

CBS News' Charles Wolfson follows the Secretary of State to Capitol Hill for some tough negotiations -- not on foreign policy, but on her agency's budget.







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href="166947.story">Diplomacy and Drugs

The Clinton administration released its annual report on how other countries are faring in the war on drugs.






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href="164698.story">Rethinking International Peacekeeping

The Clinton Administration has dusted off an old idea: create a worldwide civilian police force to be on standby for rapid deployment to international trouble spots.





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href="31963.story">New King Faces Thorny Problems

Clinton administration officials tell CBS State Department Reporter Charles Wolfson Iraq and Mideast peace will be the greatest challenges for Jordan's new ruler, Prince Abdullah.








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href="177159.story">Spring In The Diplomatic Garden

Warren Christopher used to talk about tending the "diplomatic garden." In their final spring in office, President Clinton and his foreign policy team are getting their hands dirty in that garden.

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