Foreign Policy Blogs

Middle East & North Africa

on female suicide bombers

The BBC interviews a Palestinian woman who recently completed training to become a suicide bomber. According to MSNBC's correspondent, female suicide bombers in Iraq are sort of old news.

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Baddawi: Second Nahr el Bared?

Palestinian officials are compiling a register of residents in the northern refugee camp of Baddawi to crack down on Islamist militants and to prevent unrest, one of them said on Saturday. “Rumors have spread concerning the presence of outlaws in Baddawi camp,” the official told AFP on condition of anonymity. “As a result Palestinian faction […]

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Last Weekend Story

I was already late to dinner, so I decided to take a taxi from the street. Not surprisingly, I got caught in a traffic jam. Oh well. Beirut at night. The driver starts telling me about Lebanese women. I said they are beautiful. He disagreed. Actually, he said that maybe 20% have beautiful features, but […]

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Destination: Iran

Free Patriotic Movement leader Gen. Michel Aoun will make an official visit to Tehran on Sunday for meetings with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and other senior officials. … During the visit, the first ever by Aoun to Tehran, a ceremony will be held in his honor, the daily As Safir said Friday. It said Aoun […]

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Trying to understand Lebanon

When I am outside Lebanon following the political trends, I do it, thinking that X event or Y incident is going to have an impact. Truth is that nothing thus far had a meaningful impact on the system as a whole. I feel Lebanon is kind of a hopeless case… People were assassinated and for […]

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on Gulf economies

The BBC's Julia Wheeler sounds an optimistic note on the Gulf economies in these tough times. All I have to say is, knock on wood.

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on torture in Jordanian prisons

Human Rights Watch released a report yesterday calling on the Jordanian government to address the widespread practice of torture in its prisons. (Link is to HRW press release; read the full 95-page report here or go to the LA Times summary here). Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW's Middle East Director, says that the mechanisms in place […]

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Lebanon sues Israel over hummus

Lebanon seeks a legal ruling declaring hummus Lebanese and demanding Israel repay the country for decades of lost revenue for Lebanon by marketing hummus as an Israeli product. Apparently Greece once won a similar case against France over feta cheese. David Kenner at the FP thinks it won't win the government any points; we will […]

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on Egypt's first female marriage clerk

Amal Suleiman Afifi is now Egypt's first female marriage clerk. In response to the assertion that men may resign to protest her appointment, she said “there are many qualified women to take their places.”

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on the next Israeli governing coalition

Tzipi Livni may face new challenges in forming a governing coalition thanks to Ehud Olmert's comments on the necessity of certain concessions on the part of Israel. Olmert's frank admission that Israel will probably have to withdraw from East Jerusalem, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights pushed Kadima (Olmert and Livni's party) to the […]

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elusive SOFA "close"

… according to Deputy Secretary of State Negroponte. Is this going to be like the provincial elections, where they agree to not agree yet about the hard things, and then sign off on the decisions that were reached months ago? Since the contested presence and status of military contractors is such a sensitive issue, for […]

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Saudi Arabia, the Land of Invisible Women

Dr. Qanta Ahmed, an American Muslim who spent some time practicing medicine in Saudi Arabia, answers questions for VOA on her new book about Saudi Arabia, In The Land of Invisible Women. She objects to Wahhabiism and calls it a “bastardization” of Islam, enumerating the injustices done to women in particular under the Saudi regime […]

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on the impending economic crisis in the Middle East

Rami Khouri at the Daily Star enumerates the reasons why Arab countries should be concerned about the downturn.

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on the joys of Muslim womanhood

Mohja Kahf has a piece in Sunday's Washington Post on the wonderful things about being a Muslim woman, including the egalitarian practice of signing marriage contracts, the provisions Islam makes for women acquiring property when they get married, and the generally egalitarian spirit of God as articulated in Islam. It's important to remember that Islam […]

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Spy Game in Baghdad

Spy Game in Baghdad

I meant to write about this right after the news came out but I got sidetracked with the election drama.  In his newest book, “The War Within: A Secret White House History, 2006-2008,” Bob Woodward confirms the rumor that the US is spying on Nuri al-Maliki, Iraqi Prime Minister, as well as other top Iraqi […]

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