Archive for December, 2005|Monthly archive page
Syria’s Khadddam creates tsunami in Damascus
An interview given by former Syrian Vice President Abdel Halim Khaddam Friday to al-Arabiya TV insinuating that Syria played a role in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and that President Bashar Assad should have known about it is causing a political storm in Damascus.
The Middle East, another year and still no democracy
Another year has been kept out of the Middle East, though not entirely. Turkey has made great strides as it gets ready to join the European Union – some time in the next decade or so, despite its Islamist-leaning government Ankara is implementing reforms. And Cyprus while still divided, is now part of the European Union. Well, at least the Greek half of the island.
Past and future predictions for the Middle East
Political analysts tend to go out on a limb and predict how U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East will fare over the next 12 months. This year I thought it would be interesting to compare past predictions, before making future prediction.
How Christmas has become un-PC
It’s around this time of year when the American chapter of the Taliban awakens and becomes most active. Yes, little boys and girls, they do exist, even in the land of the free and the home of the brave! (And of the Braves, too.)
I am talking about the ultra-orthodox, the extremists, the politically correct polizei — or in plain English — the PC police.
Is Eurasianism an alternative to the EU?
For 50 years Turkey has been hoping to enter the European Community and for 50 years Brussels has been playing hard ball. for almost 50 years now. Finally,now the Turks are told they might be allowed into the EU, but only after an intense negotiation period of 10-15 years, during which time the Turks will be analyzed and scrutinized to make sure they finally comply with all the demands set forth by Brussels.
Meanwhile, Russian President Putin is pushing Eurasianism,” said Zeyno Baran, director of the International Security and Energy Programs at the Nixon Center, a conservative think tank in Washington.
President Bush’s strategy for victory in Iraq
The Bush administration claim that since the fall of Saddam Hussein, the Iraqis have had three elections, each one unfolding under better circumstances and with greater Sunni participation. Yet the reality is far from rosy. If Iraqis voted in larger numbers than ever, they voted according to ethnic divisions. Early returns indicate that divisions among Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds is greater than ever.
Syriana blurred lines
“Syriana,” the new political thriller starring George Clooney, doesn’t quite succeed in explaining the phenomenon behind the rise of Islamist terrorism — and its weapon of choice, the suicide bomber.
US and the use of torture
Recent reprots that the United States used torture to obtain information and confessions from suspected terrorists tells us much on changing morals this country has undergone in the last 50 years. Compare what is happening today to the story of Italian POWs held in a U.S. military prison outside Cairo during WWII.
Fatah’s double trouble
Moderate Palestinians — and Authority President Mahmoud Abbas — suffered a severe double setback this week. First, Hamas defeated Abbas’ mainstream Fatah organization in the latest round of municipal elections in their own West Bank stronghold.
Egypt’s offer to train Iraq troops refuted
The United States is overwhelmed in Iraq as it struggles to train Iraqi forces, hoping they will eventually replace American combat troops, in turn allowing for a gradual reduction of U.S. forces in Iraq.
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