Shades of Grey in U.S. Policy towards North Africa
February 4, 2013 6 min. read

“The United States is struggling to confront an uptick in threats from the world’s newest jihadist hot spot with limited intelligence and few partners to help as the Obama administration weighs how to keep Islamic extremists in North Africa from jeopardizing national security without launching war. We want to put up a map here and […]

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A Long Road Ahead for France in Mali
January 22, 2013 4 min. read

  In light of France’s recent involvement in Mali, questions about the trajectory and length of this war are naturally coming to the fore. For me, a phrase that I keep thinking about is “the law of conservation of problems,” which comes from an environmental science text I once used. Featured in the text to […]

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As we thought. Not.
June 16, 2012 5 min. read

We are now deep into year two of the Arab world convulsions. Not one country across the North African-Middle East arc is settled. Even where it sounds quiet it is not. Two years from the first cry of freedom, very few things are how the outside world predicted. As Egyptians vote for their president in […]

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Did an Arab Winter Yield an Unexpected Spring?
May 24, 2012 5 min. read

It was a simple statement from the State Department, almost lost in the daily flurry of transcripts, very public reactions and carefully nuanced policy papers aimed at high profile flash points in the world. The statement was from U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton congratulating the people of Algeria on their elections in mid-May. The […]

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One is the loneliest number . . .
April 5, 2011 2 min. read

Earlier this month, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s reminded the world of the unchanged US support for Morocco’s “serious, realistic, and credible” compromise autonomy proposal to end the three-decades old Western Sahara conflict.  Days after, two more countries officially withdrew recognition and support of the “Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic” (SADR) “the pseudo country” run […]

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A Jasmine Revolution for Tunisia?
January 17, 2011 9 min. read

    What a difference a few days make. Since writing my post on the demonstrations in Tunisia on Wednesday, President Ben Ali went from claiming that only terrorists and fanatics were protesting to announcing that he would not run for re-election when his current term expires in 2014. He also assured the population that […]

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Tunisia Undone: Protests, Blackouts & Twitter
January 12, 2011 5 min. read

Today in Tunisia, amid government blackouts and Western apathy among the press and government bureaucracy, social media and second generation journalism through blogs is emerging as one of the only methods for demonstrators to tell their tale for those willing to listen.

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Strategy and Threat for Public Alerts in America and Europe
October 4, 2010 3 min. read

The recent news of threats emanating from Pakistan and Algeria have spooked the American and European public milling about in great and famous cities.  But the reasons behind the news that seems to single out machinations wrought in Pakistan remain murky, as they must by dint of the ways and means of intelligence. However, given […]

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Welcome to North Africa…a crossroads at a crossroads.
May 24, 2010 3 min. read

  Many who follow or work in international affairs would hesitate to call themselves “North Africanists.”  But I bet you’d be surprised that you probably are.  North Africa, also referred to as the Maghreb (which literally means “the west” in Arabic), has long been a crossroads between civilizations.  From the extensive economic partnerships and deep […]

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Chavez Travels Overseas to Build Alliances “Against Imperialism”
September 8, 2009 2 min. read

President Hugo Chávez is on a weeklong trip overseas, to strengthen alliances in “the fight against imperialism”. His itinerary includes stops in Libya, Syria, Iran, Algeria, Belarus, and Russia. Freedom House, a US-based non-profit (and declaredly non-partisan) publishes “Freedom in the World, the annual survey of global political rights and civil liberties”. It ranked each […]

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As Prices Rise Some Frays on OPEC Edges
May 13, 2009 2 min. read

OPEC reported a rise in output despite a pledge from the organization’s member to reduce production to meet quotas agreed to in December. Five members (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iran, Nigeria and Angola) increased production over the past month by a total of 180,000 bbls/day, although Saudi Arabia remains within its quota of roughly 8 mln […]

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