Mar 04

Al Jazeera’s panel highlights the unexpectedly good work by Dubai police.

Don’t believe the hype: Israel has survived such flaps “with very few repercussions” in the past.

Israel wants to know: What was Mabhouh doing in Dubai? Why not investigate that?

Australia provides ans answer: Because Hamas wasn’t systemically abusing the passport system on which the global security  depends.

Meanwhile: Get your Mossad T-shirt now!

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Mar 04

Violence is often tempting. Shirin Ebadi via roozonline.com on what the Green movement does now that the Iranian government’s repression seems to be working.

Resist reacting to tanks, bullets and shells. We must not pick up rocks. The path to justice, freedom, democracy and human rights requires flowers not blood.

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Mar 04

The pleasant notion that the Israeli-Palestinian “peace process” will make “progress” has receded. PALESTINE CRY notes “newspapers from the region [outside of Israel] are in agreement that Israel is acting to escalate the conflict and foment a war in the region.”

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Mar 02

Yossi Alpher sees “hypocrisy” all around the world in the Dubai hit story, a common enough sentiment in Israel. When Germany opened  a “murder” investigation, Ynetnews put the word in quotes.

But the hawkish Alpher also notes a hard fact: Israel’s policy of extrajudicial assassination does very little to make Israelis more secure in the long run. Indeed, such tactics have reliably served to strengthen its most militant foes.

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Mar 02

With assassination suspects possibly still on U.S. soil, the Dubai assassins have dragged America into row over fake passports, says Times Online in London.

With police investigations already underway in Australia, Ireland, and Germany, the Obama administration is going to deal with this. WashPost and NYT are still playing the story inside, appropriate  in light of the fact that there has been no official U.S. reaction, but that’s not going to last long.

For the Obama administration, this is where the rhetoric of the president’s Cairo address meets the realities of Middle East decisionmaking. Of course, Israel has the right to defend itself, and of course the U.S. assassinates al-Qaeda leaders every day. But the leaders and the publics of Arab countries (like the United Arab Emirates, where the hit took place) that are open to peace with Israel (and some of whom want U.S. help to deter Iran) are not going to be satisfied by the talking points that go over well in Washington and on cable TV.

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Mar 02

And NOW Lebanon feels sold out.

This Lebanese opposition commentator is right to sense that the combined interests of Sunnis and Christians in Lebanon (a fractious minority) do not rank high on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s regional agenda–at least not as high as seeking a front line ally in the campaign against nuclear Iran.

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Mar 01

The orphan island nation–claimed but not governed by the Beijing communists–used to be a former favorite nation of the American right, a plucky capitalist redoubt resisting the tyrants of the mainland. Now that China has become a capitalist superpower, the right’s ardor for Taiwan has become dim and redundant The plucky capitalists must look elsewhere for other friends.

Now Taiwan is a channel for Tehran’s nuclear technology needs, says AP Enterprise.

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Feb 18

From Iran’s state-controlled PressTV.

Nasrallah says Hezbollah will hit Tel Aviv airport if Lebanon is attacked.

There is an element of bluff in this. Hezbollah’s ability to take the battle so deep into Israeli territory is questionable. More likely, this is an in-kind response to Hillary Clinton’s pressurizing on Iran (understood among U.S. foes as a pro-Israeli position) that should not be underestimated. The Hezbollah leader’s ability to wage asymmetrical warfare to advance his group’s political agenda is proven. There’s not much doubt that Hezbollah’s position in Lebanon and the region is stronger today than it was before its 2006 mini-war with Israel.

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Feb 18

As long as Iran’s internal opposition continues to agitate, there is less of a likelihood of a military strike. But if, by 2011, the opposition movement has faded, and Iran is defiantly moving forward — toward a weapons capability — the likelihood of such a strike goes up significantly.

– SPIEGEL ONLINE.

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Feb 17

Rami G. Khouri on why chuckles greeted the Secretary of State’s Gulf tour.

Plus: WOS surveys Middle East reaction to Hilary’s most forceful intervention yet on the issue of Iran.

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