SED, Round III: Beijing
January 24, 2008 2 min. read

  January 17 and 18, China and the US held the third round of the Strategic Economic Dialogue in Beijing.   The SED is a cabinet-level series of summits began by President Hu Jin Tao and President George W. Bush in August, 2006 to address and smooth over Sino-American disputes such as those surrounding product safety and […]

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Iraqi Parliament makes temporary flag change
January 24, 2008 1 min. read

In a small but symbolic step forward today, the Iraqi parliament approved a change to the Iraqi national flag, removing the stars the represented Saddam Hussein's Ba’ath Party. This is a temporary change and a new flag design will be brokered in a years’ time. I think at this point, the Iraq people need much, […]

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12 killed in Mosul blast, car bomb in Kirkuk
January 24, 2008 1 min. read

Mosul, in the Kurdistan province in northern Iraq, has suffered a bomb blast that came almost immediately after police arrived to act on a tip that the building contained explosives. According to Brigadier General Abdul Karim Al-Jubouri, it occurred at 1630 local time, and witnesses said it was the loudest blast they had ever heard […]

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Berlin Wall Meets Mall of America
January 23, 2008 1 min. read

A security wall on the border between Gaza and Egypt was destroyed today, freeing the people of the trapped and desperate Strip to…shop.   Though this seems prosaic, it is vitally important to the people of Gaza, suffering under Israeli blockades (themselves a response to constant rocket attacks).    The border has turned into a bizarre bazaar, […]

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Debunking “Tribalism”
January 23, 2008 2 min. read

Sasha Chanoff, cofounder and executive director of the humanitarian organization Mapendo International, recently wrote an essential op-ed piece for The Boston Globe debunking the myth of “tribal violence” in Kenya (and elsewhere). Here is the money excerpt: FROM READING recent headlines about Kenya, one would think that the post-election violence is the result of tribal […]

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Not-So Good Neighbor Policy
January 22, 2008 1 min. read

Sorry for the silence the last few days. Life (in this case a trip to see friends in the Rocky Mountains) intervened as it so often does. South Africa's electricity shortages have become increasingly acute, and now her neighbors are scrambling, with mixed results, to fill the void left by Eskom's decision to pull the […]

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Iraq weekend roundup
January 21, 2008 1 min. read

BBC does these pieces sometimes where they will interview and tell the story of someone who is living the headlines. In a piece dated January 19 they tell the story of Noor who is an Iraqi refugee living in Syria. It's quite searing, and gives a human perspective to the media headlines. In today's Washington […]

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Soldiers of Heaven
January 18, 2008 3 min. read

The clashes between the Shi’ite sect Soldiers of Heaven and the local Iraqi security forces have occurred almost exactly a year after the previous clashes that killed over 25o people in Najaf, although this time, the violence is farther south, in Nasiriyah and Basra. They are targeting Shi’ite observers of Ashura, a major Shi’ite holiday […]

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A few things about Algeria
January 17, 2008 4 min. read

A New York Times article today portrays the United Nations as being upset at Algeria for not providing enough security in the run-up to last month's bombing of the body's Algerian offices.  A senior United Nations official said Wednesday that the Algerian government had ignored repeated requests to close off the streets outside the organization's […]

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You Can Talk, Mr. Brown, But Can You Act?
January 17, 2008 3 min. read

On the whole I’ve been pretty supportive of condemnation of Robert Mugabe coming from London and especially from Prime Minister Gordon Brown. It is thus disquieting to discover that perhaps Brown's words represent bluster and palaver. When the rubber meets the road, Zimbabweans looking to England to escape Mugabe's noxious kleptocracy are having a tough […]

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Rice visit…and more carnage.
January 16, 2008 1 min. read

Woman bomber kills 11 in Iraq in Baquba, capital of the Diyala province. Incidentally, this is the province where a major operation to clean out insurgents is underway. Unfortunately, this has been the third female bomber in three months in Baquba. With the upsurge in booby-trapped houses killing coalition and local security forces, the insurgents […]

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