Iran’s Delicate Balancing Act
May 3, 2016 5 min. read

Simultaneously courting the West and expanding its influence beyond its borders could work in the short-term. But in the short-term only.

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Saudi Arabia’s Dangerous Gambit in Lebanon
March 7, 2016 10 min. read

Saudi Arabia’s decision to suspend $4 billion in military aid to Lebanon is the latest example of a meddlesome foreign power attempting to undermine Lebanese sovereignty to advance its own political agenda.

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Assad Re-captures Yabroud and Lebanon Takes a Plunge
March 18, 2014 6 min. read

Merely a day after the Syrian civil war entered its fourth year the Assad regime scored a major victory against rebels in the town of Yabroud. Located in the Qalamoun region, a mountainous area near the Lebanese border, Yabroud had served as a crucial gateway for the transit of rebel supplies and fighters into the […]

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Sectarian Tension Intensify in Lebanon
January 8, 2014 2 min. read

Sectarian tension between Lebanon’s Sunni and Shiite factions has been escalating as conflict in Syria is spilling over its border.  A car bomb exploded on January 2, claiming five, in Beirut’s suburb largely controlled by Hezbollah.  Less than a week prior Mohammad Chatah, former Finance Minister, was killed along with six others by a car […]

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Trade-based Money Laundering: New Impetus for an Old Threat
December 18, 2013 8 min. read

The phrase “money laundering” conjures images of suitcases crammed with $100 bills being snuck across the border by a drug cartel courier, and funds being wired into and out of bank accounts in a dizzying series of globe-circling transactions. Those are apt examples of two of the three main methods of scrubbing clean illicit funds […]

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Syria: The Growing Proxy War in the Middle East
June 20, 2013 7 min. read

By Tyler Hooper On Thursday, June 13, the White House announced that it will now provide military weapons and supplies to Syrian rebels. The announcement came with claims by the Obama administration that they have found evidence of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime using chemical weapons against rebel forces, which is strictly prohibited by international […]

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How many times can the game change?
May 16, 2013 5 min. read

In January 1864, some strangely dressed men with odd accents arrived in the camp of Confederate general Robert E. Lee, whose troops had been reeling from shortages of arms and supplies. They demonstrate a new weapon – an amazingly high powered accurate “repeater” rifle – and offer it to Lee. He accepts. And the arming […]

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Is Lebanon’s Disassociation Policy Coming to an End?
April 4, 2013 8 min. read

Lebanon, a beautiful but tense country — with two civil wars behind it, has many people on edge these days. A myriad of shifting divisions and alliances, 24 years after the Taif Accord keeps the specter of violence alive. Carl von Clausewitz called war the extension of politics by other means, a truism for Lebanese […]

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Israel Strikes Again
January 31, 2013 10 min. read

  Yesterday’s strike on a convoy heading from Syria to Lebanon is but one act in an ever constant drama. Israel, for better or for worse, has had a history of violating both the air space and the territorial integrity of neighboring countries. Given that the Jewish State’s geographical location and the fact that it […]

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The Ides of March 8
November 28, 2012 7 min. read

  The imminent fall of the Assad regime in Syria is an event that will not only shape that country, but also its neighbor, Lebanon. A deeply divided society whose cleavages have been widened with the events in Syria, the country has been set on a very disastrous path. On both sides of the political […]

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Lebanon’s Salafists Challenge Hezbollah Dominance
November 11, 2012 8 min. read

  The port city of Sidon in Lebanon witnessed an almost unthinkable act today. The Sunni bastion in the south of the country was transformed into the gunfight at the O.K. Corral. Instead of Billy Clanton and Wyatt Earp, today’s belligerents in the shootout were the bodyguard of a controversial Sunni cleric and a Hezbollah […]

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Car Bomb Defused in Tbilisi, Israeli Embassy Target
February 13, 2012 3 min. read

Georgian authorities report today that a bomb planted in the car of an employee of the Israeli embassy was defused by police. The employee was, according to Georgian TV news station Rustavi 2, a Georgian citizen by the name of Roman Khachaturian, a driver for the embassy and the luckiest man in Tbilisi. Khachaturian told […]

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