Iran and Taliban: A Marriage of Convenience?
August 11, 2009 3 min. read
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There is nothing in Iran and Taliban’s past relationship, which leads one to believe that these two sides can cooperate.  Taliban’s hardcore theology includes anti-Shiite prejudice that often bought it to the brink of war with Iran during its days in power.  On August 8th 1998, Taliban killed eleven Iranian diplomats and carried out a […]

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Hillary and Angola
August 11, 2009 1 min. read

Hillary Clinton’s Africa trip continues. She spent Sunday in Angola where she continued her ongoing carrots and sticks message, the gist of which is: You are doing ok; do better; we’ll try to help; no time to explain how now, I’m off to the DRC.If this current trip is simply part of laying a foundation, […]

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Bashers Vs. Boosters
August 11, 2009 2 min. read

Africa observers oftentimes weigh in on a fruitless argument that tends to break down along rudimentary, and thus almost always wrong, lines that go something oike this: “Africa is in the midst of a catastrophe, and it’s only getting worse!” “No, Africa is doing better than you think!” The discussion is fruitless in part because […]

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Why Venezuela?
August 10, 2009 3 min. read

In starting a new blog on Venezuela perhaps the first question that comes to mind is: why should those of us drawn to international relations dedicate attention to this country? Perhaps known immediately for an often boisterous president, importance in global oil production, and its array of international beauty queens, Venezuela also holds much more […]

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The future of the EU: one conclusion leads to another
August 10, 2009 2 min. read

I was really glad to read this Opinion piece by Andrew Moravcsik,  Director of the European Union Program at Princeton in this week’s Newsweek, as it draws a neat conclusion on some of the stories I’ve brought up in this Blog over the last number of months. My very first blog for the FPA was […]

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Summer friction with Israel
August 10, 2009 3 min. read

Officials from Hizballah and Israel have been exchanging hostile words recently. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak indicated that all of Lebanon would pay the price for any Hizballah transgressions against Israel. Hizballah representatives indicated that the guerrilla group is more than prepared for another confrontation with Israel, and  is suspected of possessing over 40,000 rockets. […]

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Israel to Cease Dollar-Purchase Program
August 10, 2009 1 min. read

As of tomorrow, the Israeli government will cease its policy of purchasing $100 million per day. The program, started in July 2008, was meant to ensure that the worth of the shekel would not drop significantly by backing-up the currency. Due to stabilization in the economy, the Bank of Israel decided to end the program, […]

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Did Topless Putin Top Twitter?
August 10, 2009 3 min. read

In any other news week, the title of most amusing story would certainly have gone to the BBC for comparing Putin to a character out of Brokeback Mountain: “Photographs of a bare-chested Mr Putin riding a horse through mountain scenery may of course put some people…in mind of a recent Hollywood film about gay cowboys”. […]

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Afghanistan: The Death of the WoT, Electioneering in the US, and the Meaning of Baitullah Mehsud's Death
August 10, 2009 3 min. read

Three important issues to cover, let’s go! Ghani Gets a US Soapbox – Presidential hopeful Ashraf Ghani wrote a ‘why I should be President of Afghanistan and not Karzai’ piece in the Wall Street Journal this weekend and he comes out swinging.  Ghani argues that Karzai ‘turned’, not ‘helped’ or ‘let’, but ‘turned’ Afghanistan into […]

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Israel Reprimands its Boston Consul Over Settlements
August 9, 2009 2 min. read

A senior Israeli diplomatic official in Boston authored a memo that struck an unfortunate chord with his superiors back home. Nadav Tamir, the consul general in Boston, wrote in a memo that Israel is harming its strategic alliance with the United States over the settlement dispute with the United States. In response, senior foreign ministry […]

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Historical Perspectives on Ghajar
August 9, 2009 2 min. read

A new INSS report describes the unique situation of a town on the Israel-Lebanon border that rests within both countries. The residents of Ghajar hold Israeli citizenship but predominantly maintain their identities as Syrian. Israel claimed the town following the 1973 war that led to the capture of the Golan Heights from Syria. Due to […]

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Another Round of “Confessions”
August 9, 2009 5 min. read

While the second day of the trial of protesters arrested in post-election turmoil in Iran might not have provided the same shock level as the day one of the trial, it still had its share of extremely interesting confessions.  Though in today’s hearing no one accused high-level reformist leaders of conspiring against the Islamic Republic, […]

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