Claude Salhani
Middle East Times
December 5, 2006
WASHINGTON -- The events that unfolded these past few days in the Lebanese capital leaves no doubt that Lebanon is sitting on the political equivalent of a rumbling volcano ready to erupt at a moment's notice.
(Click on above link to read full story.)
Tuesday, December 05, 2006
Letter from the Editor
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Monday, December 04, 2006
Politics & Policies: Three Mideast fires
By CLAUDE SALHANI
UPI International Editor
The Middle East is facing the danger of three civil wars erupting -- Iraq, Lebanon and the Palestinian Territories.
(Click on title link to read full report.)
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Sunday, November 26, 2006
Live from Lebanon
by Claude Salhani
11.17.2006
BEIRUT, Lebanon.
In wake of the devastating war with Israel this summer, this pleasant strip of land on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean projects normality, with its fine restaurants and popular watering holes packed to the hilt every night. But with the rhetorical clashing between factions escalating by the day, there are fears that Lebanon could precipitously fall back into the abyss of the nightmarish days of the fifteen-year civil war. Some groups have delivered ominous threats that could prompt a shift from political to street sparring.
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Friday, September 15, 2006
Olmert's Secret Weapon: Prime Minister Deployed a Boomerang
In his bid to wipe out Hizballah in northern Lebanon, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert unsheathed his secret weapon: a precision-guided boomerang. This weapon certainly did cause massive destruction in Lebanon and then, with noted precision, wreaked damage upon its return to sender. Indeed, Olmert's foray into Lebanon may well cost him his job.
And Israel itself, as conventional wisdom has correctly had it, has also been damaged, in that an illusion of invincibility has been shattered. Of course, the Islamist victory in Lebanon builds on a succession of such triumphs, from Algeria to Somalia, and potentially in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But the chorus on the Lebanon conflict has failed to recognize the decent prospects for a successful multilateral peacekeeping operation in Lebanon. This is because, despite the reversals for Israel, each side has a modicum of victories to highlight--and defeats.
To read the full story click on the above headline, or go to http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=12058i
Copyright © 2006 The National Interest All rights reserved.
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Thursday, July 13, 2006
Politics & Policies: The world is one global village
What do illegal migrants from sub-Saharan Afriac have in common with Europeans living in Europe? AFar more than you think. (click on anove link for full story.)
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Will redrawing the map of the Middle East end conflict?
Will redrawing the map of the Middle East end conflict?
BY CLAUDE SALHANI
13 July 2006
LT. COL. Ralph Peters published an article in the US’ Armed Forces Journal last month where he outlines his vision as to what is needed to solve the many woes — and wars — troubling the Greater Middle East: redraw the maps of most countries in the turbulent region, as Lt. Col. Peters (retired) would have it. In so doing, the face of the region as we know it today would change, thereby hopefully eradicating present day conflicts.
What Peters omits from his expose is that these changes would produce winners and losers, which in turn would be the genesis of newer conflicts.
Working from the assumption that "international borders are never completely just," Peters suggests major alterations. "Modern borders," says Peters, "have been the cause of injustice, oppression and atrocities." Peters starts with Israel: the Jewish state, he says, must abide by the demands it return to the pre-1967 lines, "if it hopes to ever live in peace."
Next he takes on Saudi Arabia: The kingdom stands to lose the most, according to the author’s plan. He advocates breaking it up into three parts. The Eastern province would be tied to the "Arab Shia State," composed of parts of southern Iraq and Iran — and bits of some of the other Gulf states. Rest assured, Peters leaves the UAE (and Oman) intact. It’s Yemen that wins big with large swathes of Saudi Arabia going its way. The second part of Saudi Arabia, the part comprising the holy cities of Makkah and Medina, would be shaped into what he calls the "Islamic Sacred State." Peters sees Saudi Arabia as "A root cause of the broad stagnation in the Muslim world."
The basis of Peters’ thesis is that today’s borders were "most arbitrary and distorted," which he claims were "drawn by self-interested Europeans (who have had sufficient trouble defining their own frontiers)." To those who think that borders are unchangeable, he offers this advice declaring "that boundaries must not change and that’s that, it pays to remember that boundaries have never stopped changing through the centuries. Borders have never been static," says Peters."Oh, and one other dirty little secret from 5,000 years of history: Ethnic cleansing works," adds the retired army officer. Look at the former Yugoslavia,
Then he comes to Iraq — "A Frankenstein’s monster of a state sewn together from ill-fitting parts." He adds, "the US and its coalition partners missed a glorious chance to begin to correct this injustice after Baghdad’s fall." According to Peters, "Iraq should have been divided into three smaller states." He says the United States "failed from cowardice and lack of vision, bullying Iraq’s Kurds into supporting the new Iraqi government — which they do wistfully as a quid pro quo for our good will."
He correctly states that should there be a free plebiscite to be held. “Make no mistake,” says Peters, "Nearly 100 per cent of Iraq’s Kurds would vote for independence.
The same goes for the Kurds of Turkey, whom Peters says "have endured decades of violent military oppression and a decades-long demotion to ‘mountain Turks’ in an effort to eradicate their identity." While the plight of the Kurds in Turkey "has eased somewhat over the past decade, the repression recently intensified again and the eastern fifth of Turkey should be viewed as occupied territory."
Peters sees the Kurds of Syria and Iran, rushing to join in forming an independent Kurdistan if they could.
In the new Middle East, according to Peters, "Iraq’s three Sunni-majority provinces might eventually choose to unify with a Syria that loses its littoral to a Mediterranean-oriented Greater Lebanon: Phoenicia reborn." "Correcting borders to reflect the will of the people may be impossible, for now. But given time — and the inevitable attendant bloodshed — new and natural borders will emerge. Babylon has fallen more than once."
True, but there is bound to be more bloodshed before any such changes take place, if they ever do. And more blood after these changes take place is sure to follow.
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Wednesday, July 12, 2006
Iran, Syria fighting Israel by proxy militias
Iran, Syria use and abuse Lebanese militia... to fight Israel.
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Illegal Immigration draws Africa closer to Europe
How do you stop the flow of millions of Africans from crossing the Sahara Desert as they try to make their way to Europe, via Morocco? Not through security measures alone," say officials.
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Are Iran and Syria behind the latest Mideast escalation?
Israel is fighting on two fronts now -- Lebanon and Gaza -- in efforts to free its captured soldiers. The battle, however, could escalate to frightening proportions.
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Tuesday, July 11, 2006
Illegal Immigration: Go North, young man
Millions of would-be African immigrants head north to Morocco every year, hoping to make it to Europe from here. Alas, many die along the way.
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Monday, July 10, 2006
Despite ethnic killings, officials say still not civil war in Iraq
Officials in the Iraqi capital claim it is still not a civil war...despite the fact that masked gunmen pulled at least 40 Sunni Arabs from their houses, cafes, and cars and executed them in cold blood. Iraq's President Jalal Talabani said it brought the country to a "dangerous edge." I thought it was already there.
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Thursday, July 06, 2006
North Korea's bluff
The North Korea have gambled -- and lost. By firing their missiles the reclusive communist state we have convinced America's allies in the Pacific region of the need of a strong US presence.
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Wednesday, July 05, 2006
Islamic renewal needs US backing
In the days, months and years after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the United States has found itself in a war against an enemy it had very little intelligence on -- Islamist extremists.
Now, five years later, "The United States still lacks an integrated and sustainable strategy to confront religious extremism in the Muslim world," writes Abdeslam M. Maghraoui, director of the Muslim World Initiative at the U.S. Institute of Peace.
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Tuesday, April 18, 2006
Jihadi bomber blows up hope of peace in Mideast
More deaths and destruction in the Middle East!
Hopes of any peaceful settlement in the Middle East were blown away earlier today along with a Palestinian suicide bomber who blew himself up in central Tel Aviv Monday, killing nine people and wounding about 50 others.
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Monday, April 17, 2006
What can the US do with Iran?
Rumors were plentiful in Washington last week that a military strike on Iran was a possibility after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced that his country had succeeded in enriching uranium, a necessary first step in producing a nuclear weapon. According to a very reliable source who spoke to me on condition of anonymity, a military strike on Iran was -- or maybe still is -- in the offing, as was reported by Sy Hirsch of the New Yorker.
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Thursday, April 13, 2006
Bush's European allies pay heavy price
It's not easy being a faithful ally of president these days. Many world leaders who supported the American president in his Iraqi expedition, either politically or by contributing troops to the Iraqi campaign, have systematically found themselves voted out of a job.
In Italy this week Bush lost his staunchest European supporter ever with the defeat of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and his conservative Forza Italia to centrist Romano Prodi and his alliance of Catholics, leftists and communists
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Wednesday, April 12, 2006
Immigration troubles
Thirty-three years ago Jean Raspail wrote "The Camp of the Saints,"his almost-prophetic book on immigration gone wild. The French author explained how social conditions in the developing world deteriorated to the point that it forced millions of refugees from the Indian subcontinent to storm the beaches of southern France after commandeering an armada of cargo ships. At the same time, milliona of hungry Chinese oozed across the Amur River into Russia. With refugees flowing like uncontrolled mercury into Europe from the east and west simultaneously, the face of Europe was suddenly changed -- forever.
Could the same be happening in the US with 12 million "aliens.?"
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Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Iran closer to nukes
Only a few days after strong rumors of a possible preemptive U.S. and/or Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities circulated like wildfire around the Washington Beltway, Iran said it has taken its nuclear program forward.
"Uranium enrichment has been achieved," boasted Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Tuesday to a jubilant crowd gathered in Mashhad, during a speech televised for the world to see. This latest step in Iran's nuclear program brings the Islamic Republic that much closer to acquiring nuclear weapons.
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The players in Iraq
The author of the report, Nawaf Obaid, an adjunct fellow at The Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, recently released a comprehensive study of the situation in Iraq titled "Meeting the Challenge of a Fragmented Iraq: A Saudi Perspective." offers invaluable background on the various players and political parties elbowing for power in post-Saddam Iraq. The following are extracts of his report.
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Monday, April 10, 2006
Italy votes-- world waits for results...
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's often-controversial rule came to an abrupt end -- maybe? -- Monday after a tumultuous five years in power. This places the center-left back in control. Assuming exit polls are correct the center-left alliance leads with a margin of 4 percent to 5 percent.
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