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 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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Jan 27

Egyptian president for life Hosni Mubarak appoints the editor of Al-Ahram, the most authoritative daily newspaper in Egypt and publisher of the English-language online site Al-Ahram weekly.

I expect some to suggest that this fact discredits Joseph Massad’s take on the Palestinian predicament, as published by Al-Ahram. I don’t think so. Yes, Al-Ahram operates within some ideological red lines–that’s true of the Washington Post too. The site is an essential read in the English-speaking Arab world, just as the Post is in Washington. And Massad is hardly apologizing for Mubarak, who, after all, is the U.S. government’s most essential ally in the region.

It is an ingenius, if not ingenuous, argument, because it depends on pretending as if the repressive nature of the Egyptian regime–with all of it limitations on independent political parties, journalists and bloggers, not to mention torture and secret trials—-serves the interests of Israeli and American policymakers more than it advances the interests of say, the Palestinians in Gaza.

Bottom line, says the Eygpt Daily News: the initiative has to come from the United States.

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Nov 07

Lucia Newman blogs for  Al Jazeera:

Manuel Zelaya, the man who did everything imaginable to undo the coup that threw him out of the palace, may have inadvertently signed his political death certificate when he agreed to a US-mediated accord that opened the way for his return to him power, albeit with diminished powers.

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