Iraq in Verses: The Poetry of War and Hope
January 3, 2011 5 min. read

In an effort to preserve a nation’s humanity after decades of dictatorship and war and in a modest tribute to the enduring spirit of the Iraqi people, I have decided to ring in the New Year with a brief study of the unique and compelling poetry of Iraq.

Read more
Anniversary Media Blitz of Haiti
January 3, 2011 7 min. read

Haitians reflect on a disastrous year Port-au-Prince, Haiti— Year 2010 was arguably the longest of Haiti’s 206-year history, reflect some historians on the plurality of unprecedented events taken place in the country starting on January 12. Some recalled with up most clarity and disbelief as global television screens bled horrific images of apocalyptic episodes seared […]

Read more
Happy New Year!
January 2, 2011 1 min. read

I hope everyone had a happy holiday season. I will return tomorrow, Monday, January 3 with a new blog posting.

Read more
Think tank sees little chance for euro survival
January 2, 2011 2 min. read

Will the doom and gloom never stop? Nope, says the London-based think tank Centre for Economic and Business Research (CEBR) in their top ten predictions for the coming year. CEBR foresees another euro crisis in the spring of 2011stemming from Spain and Italy having to refinance their bonds. If the euro does not break up […]

Read more
Snow: The New Weapon of Mass Disruption?
January 2, 2011 5 min. read

This winter break has not been short on interesting, worrisome international developments like the new START Treaty, the latest Chinese anti-naval weapon system, the unpredictable North Korean foreign policy, the meltdown of the Eurozone, Estonia joining the Eurozone, and the Mikhail Khodorkovsky’s judicial drama among many others. Nothing, however, has been more concrete and disrupting […]

Read more
The European Person of the Year
January 2, 2011 5 min. read

There is a number of terribly unexciting and obvious, or maybe rather dubious candidates for a European Person of the Year award of course. Thus Benedict XVI slackened his church’s stance on the sinfulness of condoms, yet he was forced to deal with (or at times: ignore) constantly recurring pedophilia revelations in Ireland as well […]

Read more
2010 Year in Review
January 1, 2011 4 min. read

Year in review For Lebanon, 2010 was dominated by the continued investigation into the death of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Hariri  was murdered in February 2005, sparking off massive protests that led to the end of Syria’s 30 year occupation of Lebanon. Since 2007, the UN-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) has been gathering […]

Read more
Bangladesh in 2010: The Year in Review
January 1, 2011 7 min. read

The Year So Far. Happy New Year to all.  By the time this gets posted and read, Bangladesh will have been swept into the parade of countries switching alendars to a new year, 2011, and one sincerely hopes her people will turn to a new way of viewing the world. Bangladesh, its government and its […]

Read more
New Ford for 2011
December 31, 2010 3 min. read

Well just when you thought US-Syria relations where stuck in a rut we get a major curveball from Pres. Obama. Robert Ford has been pushed through as US ambassador to Syria as part of a series of recess appointments by President Obama. While the manner of his appointment will limit the term of his ambassadorship, […]

Read more
Southern Africa: 2010 In Review
December 31, 2010 3 min. read

I agree with the old adage that the more things change, the more they remain the same. Despite  self-congratulatory speeches and political sloganeering, 2010 has not been the best year for Southern Africa in terms of problem solving, innovation, and policy entrepreneurship. Take for example (as I alluded in one of my previous blog entries): […]

Read more
Iraq: 2010 in Review
December 31, 2010 6 min. read

By this time next year, the United States should have withdrawn all of its troops from Iraq. We can hope that this long, bloody chapter in American military history may be at an end.

Read more
Year in Review pt 1: Unexpected Events
December 30, 2010 2 min. read

What was the least expected event in Europe this year? Depends on your definition of unexpected. The most literal response, of course, is the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull in Iceland, though a study published three months before the eruption documented increased activity near the volcano. But it did not predict the category 4-level eruption that grounded […]

Read more

Popular from Press