Foreign Policy Blogs

Regions

Tense situation in Lebanon

Tense situation in Lebanon

  For a political perspective on the conflict make sure you read the analysis provided by Elie Fawaz, Lee Smith, Tony Badran and Michael Young. Pictures speak more than words. The conflict in Sheikh Nasrallah's words The government is a cover for Terje Roed-Larsen and UNSCR 1559. That is its basic description. We have the […]

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EU-US trade rhetoric

EU-US trade rhetoric

“Don't let yourself be fooled,” is EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson's message to American voters. In an interview for BBC's Hardtalk, which was excerpted to the Financial Times, Mandelson argues that promising disengagement from certain parts of the global trading system in order to win votes is dangerous. Implicitly critiquing views expressed by Democratic Presidential […]

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Oil and the Left in Mexico

On April 10th 2008, opposition legislators closed the podiums in both the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. This action effectively forced the remaining members of Congress to take legislative action elsewhere and prevented a fast track approval of a key energy reform that affects the most precious natural resource in Mexico: oil. Between 2001 […]

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New Series: Reading Russia

Writing from this month's annual conference of the World Affairs Council of Northern California, Foreign Policy Blogger Mark Dillen examines, through the comments of conference participants, Russia's political transition, European energy security, and US-European relations.  Part II examines the transition of power from President Vladimir Putin to his successor, Dimitri Medvedev.  Read the article here.

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The State, The Media and SABC

Recent shakeups at the South African Broadcasting Corporation have revived what seem to have become perpetual controversies over perceived government encroachments on the SABC's independence and pressure to adhere to a party line. Perhaps the question should be what role the government should play in the media at all. After all, every government tries to […]

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Violence and Politics in Mugabe's Zimbabwe

According to a the head of a South African contingent of regional election observers, the presidential election run-off in Zimbabwe cannot take place given the current and threatened levels of violence. How convenient for President Robert Mugabe, for whom violence and the threat of its usage has always been a useful political tool. Such a […]

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US Ambassadors to Africa

This week nine nominees for ambassadorial posts to Africa stood before the United States Senate's Foreign Relations Committee. AllAfrica has the details on the nominees and their backgrounds. The posts to be filled include posts to Senegal and Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Ghana, Liberia, Togo, Malawi, Zambia, Cape Verde, and Botswana.

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Backward Into the Pit

Lebanon's stagnant and maddening political quagmire is quickly becoming a hot war that threatens to send this beautiful and violence-racked country reeling back into the dark days of the civil war. Days of Hezbollah protests and roadblocks are leading to increased confrontation.  Here is the New York Times’ lead. The decision by the Lebanese government […]

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Hizballah vs State

Hizballah vs State

Is this the beginning of the end for Hizballah? It may very well be so if the army splits and the clashes go beyond Beirut. While Hizballah threatens the government, a group of Lebanese lobbyists are in the United States asking the UN to put Lebanon under Chapter VII. If and when that happens, Hizballah […]

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Gunfire rocks downtown Beirut

Gunfire erupted in Lebanon following a statement by Hizbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. CNN reporters trapped with Lebanese forces filed breifings Thursday from downtown Beirut.  The Lebanese army was pinned down by gunfire between rival Shiite and Sunni groups. Reports from the Green Line separating Sunni and Shiite communities suggest the Lebanese army, largely known for […]

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Hizballah bracing for war

Hizballah says Beirut government declares war   Thu May 8, 2008 11:00am EDT By Nadim Ladki BEIRUT (Reuters) – The Iranian-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah said on Thursday the U.S.-supported Beirut government had declared war by targeting its communications network. Hezbollah launched a new street campaign on Wednesday, piling pressure on the government after it declared […]

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Hizballah's Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah in live press conference

Transcript provided in English by Now Lebanon and in Arabic by Al Manar. [Emphasis mine] Nasrallah: The government must know that it has led Lebanon into a dangerous situation. I will speak of many issues as they are. Nasrallah: The first topic is the communication network, then the issue of airport security, Chief Shoukair and […]

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Lebanese airport closed due to violence

Lebanese airport closed due to violence

Officials closed the Rafik Hariri International Airport in Beirut Thursday morning as Hizballah supported demonstrators blocked the entrance with burning tires and mounds of earth.  Riots and gunbattles erupted for the second straight day amid labor protests and opposition to electoral laws ushering former military commander Michel Suleiman to the presidency.  Former President Emile Lahoud […]

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Africa Quick Hits

There is lots of news and not much time for analysis, so enjoy these links on a range of issues: At Pambazuka News Chido Makunike looks at the Complexities of Zimbabwe with special emphasis on the various political participants and their needs and desires. A little less elegantly — which is not to say any […]

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Presidential matters

Presidential matters

Angela Merkel, German Chancellor, received Europe's most prestigious honor on May 1: the international Charlemagne Prize. Previous winners include US President Bill Clinton, former EU Commission President Jacques Delors, Luxembourg's Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker and Europe's “Mr. Foreign Policy,” Javier Solana. None other than French President Nicolas Sarkozy delivered the laudatory address – an interesting […]

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