- AEI – The problem of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood
- Egypt frees jailed Shiite rights activists: lawyers – Dereini released
- Self-styled morality police now commonplace in Egypt – This story might slightly exagerate but it is definitely becoming more common – just try to take the metro if you’re female. My question is whether this is personal initiative or organized dawa.
- Training your first responders – MountainRunner – I feel bad for laughing at this (thanks, x)
- Arab FMs see Livni as ?Dracula’s younger sister? – “Why doesn’t anyone want to shake my hand?” she asked. “Why doesn’t anyone want to be seen speaking to me?”
- “Roger Cohen: Viva Mubarak, Fuera Chavez!” by Ken Silverstein (Harper’s Magazine) – Ken Silverstein points out Roger Cohen’s double standards — but it’s not just about strategic interests, Ken. It’s also and has long been about racism against non-white, (mostly) non-Christian people.
- Blogosphère marocaine : liens utiles – Larbi’s list of useful links to the Moroccan blogosphere
Tag: us
US withdraws resolution under Israeli pressure
US withdraws Mideast resolution:
UNITED NATIONS – Because of Israeli objections, the United States suddenly withdrew a U.N. resolution endorsing this week’s agreement by Israeli and Palestinian leaders to try to reach a Mideast peace settlement — even though the measure had overwhelming Security Council support.
The U.S. about-face in less than 24 hours on Friday surprised many U.N. diplomats and highlighted Israel’s difficult relations with the United Nations, which it contends is anti-Israeli and pro-Palestinian. But what surprised U.N. diplomats most was that the U.S. didn’t consult Israel, one of its closest allies, before introducing the draft resolution on Thursday afternoon.
With virtually every other Mideast resolution, the U.S. has consulted Israel in advance, but on Thursday, U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad first presented it at a closed council meeting.
As he left, he welcomed the “very positive” response from council members but told reporters he needed to consult with the Israelis and Palestinians on the text to ensure that the resolution was what they wanted.
It clearly was not what Israel wanted as a first step to support the agreement that emerged at the U.S.-sponsored Mideast conference in Annapolis, Md. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert agreed to try to reach a peace settlement by the end of 2008.
Well-informed diplomats said Israel didn’t want a resolution because it would bring the Security Council, which it distrusts, into the fledgling negotiations with the Palestinians.
The diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said Khalilzad introduced the draft resolution not only without consulting the Israelis and Palestinians but without getting broad support from President Bush’s administration.
“It’s not the proper venue,” Israel’s deputy ambassador Daniel Carmon told reporters after Friday’s council meeting. “We feel that the appreciation of Annapolis has other means of being expressed than in a resolution.”
Why don’t the Israelis want a UN resolution on Annapolis? Because they want to stay as far as possible from the solutions to the conflict that are most legitimate in international law, namely the ones contained in UN Resolution 242. As always, Israel gets its special treatment and dictates the US position in the United Nations. So while there is broad international consensus on the conflict, Israel seeks to escape it, because it can.
Links for November 29th
Automatically posted links for November 29th:
- Toward a New U.S.-Middle East Strategy – Saban Center (eeekh!) and CFR team up for Mideast policy recommendations for next prez
- Foes Use Obama’s Muslim Ties to Fuel Rumors About Him – washingtonpost.com – “Obama aides sharply disputed the initial stories suggesting that he was a Muslim, and in Iowa, the campaign keeps a letter at its offices, signed by five members of the local clergy, vouching for the candidate’s Christian faith.” I like these conspiracy
- 1973 U.S. Cable on Mideast Mirrors Current Events – washingtonpost.com – “In January 1974, with the Watergate scandal making headlines, Egypt’s President Anwar Sadat wrote in a secret letter to Faisal that President Richard M. Nixon “could easily be impeached” and that “Arabs must do everything they can to strengthen” Nixon, a
- Seven Years for Murder – More Egyptian police officers sentenced for torture
- Trappist Command: Thou Shalt Not Buy Too Much of Our Beer – WSJ.com – I have had this beer, and it really is something else. It tingles against your palate and feels incredibly velvety and smooth. The bizarre sensation lingers a long time, numbing your mouth, and its bouquet is very subtle for such a strong beer, with very
- L?affaire du faux mariage homosexuel s?avère être une manipulation politique – This article (from a very pro-regime newspaper) accuses the Islamist movement in Morocco that is close to the PJD of nearly lynching a man involved in a rather sordid affair of “homosexual marriage” in northern Morocco. If you check at-Tajdid, the PJD-fri
- ??? ????? – The site of Muslim Brotherhood activist and blogger Ahmed Mohsen, who was arrested in Fayoum along with 25 people who were apparently planning their strategy to contest next year’s municipal elections
- New term for Egypt CB governor – al-Okdah’s reappointment should squash persistent rumors that he is in the running for becoming PM. Nazif probably to stay for another year at least
- Saudis See Potential for Influence in Sharif – WSJ.com – An interesting look at Saudi policy towards Pak, based on the fall of Musharraf
- Al Jadid Magazine – New issue of US-based Arab culture mag out, including a look at the World Press Photo pic from Lebanon, an interview with Alaa al-Aswany, and a lot more
Links for November 28th
- Critical writer jailed in Tunisia – On Monday, police in Sfax, Tunisia’s second largest city, detained Slim Boukhdhir, a well-known blogger and contributor to the London-based Al-Quds Al Arabi.
- ‘Aqoul: Hirsi Ali: Ideological Chameleon – Holy CRAP! Hirsi Ali’s rightward shift
- tabsir.net » Al Qaeda?s generational split – Yemeni tactics for splitting jihadist groups
- Talking Points | National Security Network – Website of reality-based security types
- Le Monde.fr : Une vidéo-amateur contredit la version de la police sur l’accident de Villiers-le-Bel – Amateur video indicates initial shock of police car against motorbike not very violent, car was damaged with metal bars afterwards and police is lying about it
- WHO’S WHO OF PREZ CAMPAIGN SECURITY ADVISERS – New list of security / FP advisors to US presidential candidates, surprisingly does not include the more well-known rabid neocons in Rudy’s list
- Hillary Clinton’s advisers too gung-ho on Iraq war, critics say – Is Hillary Clinton the hawk masquerading as the dove?
- ‘Not very good’ Saddam spy gets 4 years – Yahoo! News – More examples of the terrible threat to the US that Saddam represented. Hmm, let me think, what other Middle Eastern country successfully infiltrated spies in critical national security institutions?
- Police say Paris rioters are armed as clashes escalate – Officials in Paris last night warned that rioters in the suburb of Villiers-le-Bel were armed with hunting rifles and air rifles as clashes with police continued to escalate.
- Boom fuels new Saudi spending spree | Business | The Guardian – Annual revenues of $165bn are funding six new cities to create jobs – but can it last?
- Cairo International Film Festival – Home Page – Schedules, events, etc. (apparently Morocco is focus of festival)
- In Annapolis, Conflict by Other Means by Robert Blecher and Mouin Rabbani – “As for the Annapolis meeting itself, it is being greeted with indifference, with few believing it will lead to either meaningful change in their daily lives or substantive progress toward the end of an Israeli occupation now in its fifth decade.”
Links for November 26th
Automatically posted links for November 26th:
- أول صØÙ�ÙŠ مسيØÙŠ Ù…ØµØ±ÙŠ يجري ØÙˆØ§Ø±Ù‹Ø§ مع مرشد الإخوان المسلمين مهدي عاكÙ� – The first interview of MB Guide Mahdi Akef by an Egyptian Christian, apparently
- Foul times ahead for Egypt’s bean staple – Alarmist predictions for fuul. Actually a lot comes from China nowadays, like everything else
- Why the Arab street? Â – Rami Khouri says the Arab street has changed, is essentially a mixture of nationalism and islamism, and counts for something
- International Crisis Group – Darfur?s New Security Reality – Report says Darfur situation getting worse, blames all parties, calls for sanctions all-round
- Building barriers – Great email forward about muhagaba/munaqaba-only café – “no Xian girls allowed”
- Ghassan Charbel on Lebanon – Al Hayat – “The Lebanese formula is by all means unique. It is a Tabbouleh plate whose ingredients have to be carefully weighed. Too much bulgur and it is an indigestion. Foreign parsley ruins its pleasure. The oil and onions have to be carefully handled, and the to
- The Alliance of Egyptian Americans – New group seeks to foster democratic change
al-Hurra: reality check
Anyway, apparently this is what I’ve been missing from not watching al-Hurra: Israeli tools. Satloff is basically a professional lobbyist, which actually makes him more bearable than Ross, who has been spreading his extremely skewed vision of Oslo / Camp David II for years, sabotaging reasonable US policy along the way, while pretending to some kind of statesman status (he is also advising both Obama and Clinton – another reason to vote Edwards if you’re a Democrat. Update: apparently Ross also advises Edwards. Oh well.) Apparently, the other regular feature on al-Hurra is Iraqi Shia propaganda, or so they say.
But really, everything that needs to be said about al-Hurra has already been said by Abu Aardvark.
Del.icio.us links for November 23rd
Automatically posted links for November 23rd:
- Arab Countries to Send Senior Delegations to Peace Talks – Saudi reluctantly coming along, other Arab states breathe sifh of relief
- Hands Off Iran – “I will not pay my income tax if we go to war with Iran.”
- U.S. Navy steps up fuel deliveries to Gulf forces | Reuters – Increased supply could mean exercises to warn Iran, or worse
- «La vie sexuelle d’un islamiste à Paris» de Leila Marouane | Babelmed –
- AFP: Egypt Copt jailed 45 years after father’s conversion – Utterly ridiculous
- ANALYSIS: PA should have set the bar higher at the outset – Haaretz – Even an Israeli newspaper is aghast at the Palestinians “defeatist attitude” pre-Annapolis
- Al-Qaeda in Algeria | Babelmed – Interview with Hamida Layachi, expert on GSPC
Pakistan – Egypt parallels
Michael Gerson – Where We Went Wrong In Pakistan – washingtonpost.com:
The current debate on Pakistan is a contest of historical analogies. Is Musharraf more like Ferdinand Marcos, the Filipino dictator deposed in favor of a democracy? Or is he the shah of Iran, whose fall resulted in a radical, anti-American regime?
It is Musharraf’s own view that is most instructive. According to one report, he mentions a third ruler as his model — Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. Mubarak has survived by presenting America with a choice: his own oppressive, military rule or the triumph of the Islamists — the pharaoh or the fanatics. And he has done his best to guarantee that these are the only choices by destroying moderate, democratic opposition and forcing most dissent into the radical mosque.
Musharraf seems to be on the same path. While talking about fighting radicalism, his real energy has been devoted to imprisoning and harassing his democratic opponents. As in Egypt, this approach has elevated the Islamists. Polling by the nonprofit group Terror Free Tomorrow shows broad Pakistani support for democracy, coupled with considerable sympathy for radical groups that oppose the military regime. In the long run, propping up favorable dictators to fight terrorism causes a backlash.
Fortunately, there are options in Pakistan beyond the pharaoh or the fanatics — responsible senior leaders of the army and well-known democratic leaders. Additional pressure on Musharraf is not likely to result in an Islamist revolution. So it would make sense to cut aid to Pakistan if Musharraf does not back off from emergency rule — not humanitarian aid, or even counterterrorism aid, but military aid not directly tied to the fight against terrorists. This would give the army a stake in Pakistan’s return to democracy.
The Pakistani crisis is important for its own sake, but it is also a warning. Eventually, we will see street protests and crackdowns in Egypt — perhaps when Mubarak passes from the scene. And the same question will arise: Have we done enough to encourage political alternatives to Islamist groups? On the current course, the answer will be “no.”
I think the same kind of thinking is coming to the fore in Washington regarding military aid. Egyptian opposition activists I know off are divided on this issue, though. Many (probably most among the left and Islamists) are not interested in engaging the US one way or the other, either believing that it is deeply committed to maintaining a friendly regime in Cairo at all costs or that the US’ imperialist policies in the region mean no one should deal with them. Some, like Saad Eddin Ibrahim, advocate exactly the kind of carrot-and-sticks approach Gerson is talking about and would like to see US act on its claim to want democracy in Egypt, including by cutting aid. Yet a third type does not want pressure on the military to be associated with the cause of reformists, and is advocating against cutting military aid because they believe that getting the military on board for reform is essential and is more likely by working with them rather than against them. And then of course there are the reform-the-system-from-within types who mostly look at carrots and basically say the US should be patient and wait for the post-Mubarak era for the implementation of gradual reform.
Which one you believe in, at the end of the day, depends on whether you think a radical break with the current regime is possible (or desirable) or whether gradualism is best. The problem with the first is that it’s unpredictable; the problem with the second is that we’ve been down that road before and it had yielded negative results. The US, as a major player in Egypt’s domestic politics at the strategic level, will almost certainly opt for gradualism. If it is serious about democratization (and right now it looks like it’s not), it’s going to have to devise a new formula for muscular gradualism, because the old formula plainly did not work. The job of those democracy activists who are willing to engage the US is to provide some leadership and ideas about how they can do that, and start convincing the Egyptian political elite that it might be in its best interests to follow suit. In Pakistan, they have pragmatic opposition political leaders that can provide these alternatives, however flawed. Egypt for now doesn’t.
Del.icio.us links for November 21st
Automatically posted links for November 21st:
- مجمع البØÙˆØ« الإسلامية يواÙ�Ù‚ علي نشر «الإسلام هو الØÙ„» وكتب إخوانية لـ«البنا» و«مشهور» – Egypt Islamic council authorizes publication of Ikhwan publications – this will have the conspiracy theorists going!
- “U.S. Seeks to Prosecute Pulitzer Prize Winning A.P. Photographer” by Scott Horton (Harper’s Magazine) – Pentagon to put AP photog on trial on dubious charges
- خلص ! :: من Ù†ØÙ† – Khalass! campaign in Lebanon, civil society urges politicians to resolve differences
- Beirut Is Not Tehran – Exum and McInerney on why the US should change policy in Lebanon
- Space Age Wudu – Ablution device from the future
- FT.com / World – Sharif hopes to end Saudi exile – Saudis pushing for Sharif as PM in Pakistan, against US wishes
- Islamists Today: Brotherhood Youth: A time bomb – Khalil al-Anani on the generational divide in the MB
- YouTube – Musharraf’s crackdown on media – Al Jazeera report on crackdown on press, possible UAE collaboration
- Meeting Resistance: A film by Steve Connors & Molly Bingham – Movie about the Iraqi underground, has insider footage of insurgent cells
Del.icio.us links for November 19th
- Una persecucion escandalosa – Spanish intellectuals speak out for Algerian dissident placed under arrest
- Am I to blame for his private war? | The Observer – A photographer and a soldier’s story from Iraq
- Mideast Conference Nears, With Few Plans – washingtonpost.com – No one has any idea of what’s going on with Annapolis
- Christians in Jerusalem want Jews to stop spitting on them – Love that headline
- “Viva la Revolucion” in Riyadh — for 24 hours – Chavez in Saudi Arabia, invokes Christ, social justice. Wrong audience?