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Brief Analysis
Iran:
Part of the Problem or Part of the Solution?
British foreign secretary Jack Straw arrives in Tehran today to "build alliances with every country that we can." In fact, Iran is the acid test of U.S. resolve to fulfill the goal set by President George Bush in his speech to Congress, namely, "From this day forward, any nation that
Sep 24, 2001
◆
Patrick Clawson
Brief Analysis
The War against Terror:
Saudi Arabia's Crucial Role
The visit to Washington this week by Saudi foreign minister Prince Saud Al Faisal is an early test of Saudi Arabia's ability and willingness to work with U.S. authorities in meeting the threat of terrorism led by Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden. Although the United States is the kingdom's strongest
Sep 20, 2001
◆
Simon Henderson
Brief Analysis
Terror against America:
Assessment and Implications (Part II)
On September 13, 2001, Robert Satloff and Dennis Ross addressed a special Washington Institute briefing on the September 11 terrorist attacks.
Sep 20, 2001
◆
Dennis Ross
Brief Analysis
Terror against America:
Assessment and Implications (Part I)
On September 13, 2001, Robert Satloff and Dennis Ross addressed a special Washington Institute briefing on the September 11 terrorist attacks.
Sep 19, 2001
◆
Robert Satloff
Articles & Testimony
Undeterred
Almost two weeks after the horrific bombings of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, a peculiar intellectual practice is emerging in America's salons and seminars. Across the nation, the heirs of the 1960s peace movement, and some of its survivors, are once more staging sit-ins and marches. The airwaves
Sep 18, 2001
◆
Ray Takeyh
Articles & Testimony
The Taliban's Fragile House of Cards
Few understand why the Taliban are so insistent on harbouring a man involved in the deaths of thousands over the past decade. After all, the Taliban complain frequently of their international isolation - only Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, and the breakaway Chechen government recognise them. One CNN
Sep 18, 2001
Articles & Testimony
The U.S. Can Collapse the Taliban
One week after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, world attention is focusing on reprisals against Afghanistan, whose Taliban regime has been sheltering not only Osama bin Laden and his al-Qa'ida organization, but also a myriad of other terrorist groups. While the war against terrorism announced
Sep 18, 2001
Brief Analysis
Quandaries about Coalitions:
The U.S. Response to September 11
Given the scope of last week's terrorist attacks and the shadowy nature of the perpetrators, the White House has pledged that U.S. retaliation will be qualitatively different from the past -- targeting states as well as organizations, crafting a wide international coalition, employing an array of military, political, and cultural
Sep 17, 2001
◆
Ray Takeyh
Brief Analysis
Osama bin Laden, the Taliban, and the Challenge of State Sponsors
Three days after the horrific attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, investigators are concentrating on al-Qaida, the terrorist network of Saudi financier Osama bin Laden. But as President Bush warned, focusing on the perpetrators must not detract from focusing on those that make his operation possible. The
Sep 14, 2001
Brief Analysis
The Ibrahim Case and U.S.-Egypt Policy:
Toward a More Robust Approach
Recent events should give Washington the opportunity to pursue the Ibrahim case more vigorously.
Sep 6, 2001
◆
Amy Hawthorne
Brief Analysis
'Preemptive Targeted Killings' As a Counterterror Tool:
An Assessment of Israel's Approach
Yesterday's killing of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) chief Abu Ali Mustafa by Israel, and the State Department's condemnation of this act, have refocused attention on Israel's use of "targeted killings" as part of its counterterror policy. Since the start of the "al-Aqsa intifada," Israeli forces have
Aug 28, 2001
◆
Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
Libya's Confident Defiance and ILSA
The arraignment Friday of Brian Regan, an employee of the National Reconnaissance Office, on charges of espionage for Libya, once more places Colonel Mu'ammar Qaddafi's domain on the front pages. The secrets sold to Libya may have included information about American satellite over-flights which have in the past been able
Aug 27, 2001
◆
Ray Takeyh
Articles & Testimony
Beware of the Anti-U.S. Rants in the Mideast
President Bush called Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to express his condolences for the innocent Israelis killed in Hamas' latest suicide bombing spree. But Sharon could have given his own condolences to Bush, since one of the victims was an American. Given the current trend of Palestinian terrorism and rhetoric
Aug 26, 2001
◆
David Schenker
Articles & Testimony
Monitory Policy
After throwing away Palestinian statehood, 98 percent of the West Bank, a chunk of Jerusalem, and peace in the Middle East, Yasir Arafat still wants to cloak himself in the mantle of peacemaker. A return to calm would be possible, Arafat tells anyone who will listen, if only international monitors
Aug 23, 2001
Brief Analysis
Durban, the Human Rights Community, and the Middle East
The World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance is to begin in Durban, South Africa on August 31, 2001. It follows the trend of increased concern for human rights over the last several years, seen in new approaches to international humanitarian law. This trend has witnessed the
Aug 16, 2001
Brief Analysis
Palestinian National Unity:
Formalizing the Informal?
In the aftermath of the horrific Hamas suicide bombing of a Jerusalem pizzeria on August 9, President Bush once again called on Palestinian Authority (PA) leader Yasir Arafat to take the necessary steps to end the violence. Inside the PA, however, there is little discussion about a cessation of violence
Aug 15, 2001
◆
David Schenker
Brief Analysis
From Oslo to Camp David to Taba:
Setting the Record Straight
On August 8, 2001, Dennis Ross, counselor and distinguished fellow at The Washington Institute and former special Middle East coordinator in the Clinton administration, addressed queries posed by Margaret Warner and Jim Hoagland during a special question-and-answer session. The following are excerpts from the discussion. Read a full transcript. On
Aug 14, 2001
◆
Dennis Ross
Articles & Testimony
Times Bomb
Imagine the New York Times covering the sinking of the Titanic with only a passing reference to the iceberg. Absurd? Not really. On July 26 the nation's newspaper of record devoted 5,681 words to a retrospective by Jerusalem bureau chief Deborah Sontag titled "Quest for Mideast Peace: How and Why
Aug 13, 2001
◆
Robert Satloff
Articles & Testimony
The Iraqi People Want to Know When Mr. Bush Will Get Tough
On May 18, the day after Great Britain proposed lifting United Nations sanctions on all civilian goods in Iraq, a taciturn Iraqi farmer asked me: "Why does the West talk about Saddam's war crimes on one day, but reward him the next?" Such is the perception of ordinary Iraqis, who
Aug 13, 2001
Articles & Testimony
How Some Iraqis Would Slam Saddam
In 1981, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was near completion of a nuclear reactor in Osirak capable of producing nuclear weapons. Shortly before the reactor began operation, Israeli warplanes destroyed it in a raid roundly condemned throughout Europe and the United States. A decade later, in 1991, Hussein invaded Kuwait, and
Aug 12, 2001
Pagination
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