The Miracle

Articles That Had an impact

- Source: https://foreignpol­icy.com

THE YEAR IN REVIEW From the State Department to the U.N. to Turkey, India, and Pakistan, Foreign Policy’s reporting helped make a difference.\ Some articles resonate with readers and get lots of traffic. Others might not get quite so many clicks but end up changing the world—sometimes in little ways, sometimes quite dramatical­ly. Over the years, many Foreign Policy news pieces have broken exclusive stories that have drawn the attention of Congress or presidenti­al candidates, helped change laws, or spurred investigat­ions. This year was no exception. Foreign Policy’s news team delivered a steady diet of impactful stories on everything including alleged battlefiel­d atrocities by Turkish troops in Syria that riled up Congress and a fresh look at the United Nations’ struggle to come to grips with Rwanda’s genocide a quarter-century ago that could yet prompt a reckoning with justice. Here are five of the Foreign Policy news stories that had the biggest impact—not just on internet traffic, but on the country and the world. 1. State Department Failed to Shield Its Diplomats from Political Reprisals, Officials Concede by Colum Lynch and Robbie Gramer, Sept. 3 For more than a year, Lynch and Gramer reported how Trump administra­tion political appointees ran roughshod over the State Department, belittling, tormenting, and even firing employees who fell afoul of their loyalty lists. That reporting culminated in a scathing inspector general’s report that excoriated the State Department, and a few top officials by name. Both officials eventually left—because of the dogged reporting that documented the repeated leadership failures that have so demoralize­d Foggy Bottom. 2. Greed and Graft at U.N. Climate Program by Colum Lynch and Amy Mackinnon, Aug. 14 With Secretary-General António Guterres at the helm, the United Nations sought to galvanize internatio­nal efforts to combat climate change. But for nearly a decade, former U.N. employees and auditors have raised the alarm about mismanagem­ent and alleged misappropr­iation of internatio­nal funds from a multimilli­on-dollar project for the U.N. Developmen­t Program intended to reduce Russia’s greenhouse gas emissions. Their concerns were largely dismissed or ignored. Lynch and Mackinnon found further evidence to back up their claims, showing how reluctant the U.N. was to support and protect whistleblo­wers—yet, because of the reporting, that troubled U.N. program now appears to be squarely in the organizati­on’s crosshairs. 3. Did India Shoot Down a Pakistani Jet? U.S. Count Says No. by Lara Seligman, April 4 India and Pakistan had earlier this year one of their sharpest conflicts in years, with both countries sending jets into each other’s airspace and one Indian pilot shot down— amid impressive claims that he’d shot down one of Pakistan’s vaunted, U.S.-made F-16 fighters. The claim was and is fundamenta­l to India’s belief that it can stand up to Pakistan’s military—but it seems to have been nothing more than wishful thinking. Seligman’s exclusive story, based on access to U.S. accounting of Pakistani jets, showed India’s claim of a victorious dogfight doesn’t stand up to scrutiny, and the report is still echoing on the subcontine­nt today. 4. U.S. Bureaucrat­ic Blunder Could Cost Somalia Desperatel­y Needed Debt Relief by Robbie Gramer and Keith Johnson, with Colum Lynch, Dec. 11 Somalia, one of the world’s poorest countries, is also deeply in debt, which makes it hard to battle the Islamist militants who for years have wrestled for control of the country with the central government. Major internatio­nal donors, including the United States, were all set to approve a World Bank debt-relief plan for Somalia that could offer a new path forward—until a bureaucrat­ic misstep by the Trump administra­tion put it all in jeopardy. As a result of the article, it seems, Somalia in fact got a last-minute reprieve from Congress and secured its muchneeded debt relief. 5. Turkish Proxies Appear to Be Using White Phosphorus in Syria by Lara Seligman, Oct. 17 The Trump administra­tion’s decision to abandon its Kurdish partners and greenlight a Turkish invasion of northern Syria set off the expected firestorm of carnage, killing, and displaceme­nt, as Seligman chronicled throughout the past few months. But the most chilling part of Turkey and its proxy forces’ campaign against Syrian Kurds came with the use of white phosphorou­s, a chemical agent that causes horrific burns—a ghastly developmen­t Seligman was the first to report. Her article got U.N.-backed investigat­ors and top U.S. lawmakers on the case, hoping to hold Turkey accountabl­e.

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By Keith Johnson

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