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Primer on Palestine, Israel and the Arab-Israeli Conflict
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IN PRINT

Empire's Eastern Reach
MER 246 - Spring 2008

MER 245 cover
The Politics of Youth
MER 245 - Winter 2007

MER 244 cover
Displaced
MER 244 - Fall 2007

MER 243 cover
The War Economy of Iraq
MER 243 - Summer 2007

MER 242 cover
The Shi‘a in the Arab World
MER 242 — Spring 2007


Iran: Looking Ahead
MER 240 - Winter 2006


Life Under Siege
MER 240 - Fall 2006

MER 239 cover
Dispatches from the War Zones
MER 239 - Summer 2006

MER 238 cover
Year of Elections: Fact and Fiction
(MER 238, SPring 2006)


Fragments of the State
(MER 237, Winter 2005)

MER 236 Cover
Inside Syria and Lebanon
(MER 236, Fall 2005)

 

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DIRECT LINKS TO ARCHIVED MER ISSUES

Empire's Eastern Reach (MER 246, Spring 2008)

The Politics of Youth (MER 245, Winter 2007)

Displaced (MER 244, Fall 2007)

The War Economy of Iraq (MER 243, Summer 2007)

The Shi‘a in the Arab World (MER 242, Spring 2007)

Iran: Looking Ahead (MER 241, Winter 2006)

Life Under Siege (MER 240, Fall 2006)

Dispatches from the War Zones (MER 239, Summer 2006)

Year of Elections: Fact and Fiction (MER 238, Spring 2006)

Fragments of the State (MER 237, Winter 2005)

Inside Syria and Lebanon (MER 236, Fall 2005)

Europe and Islam: The Challenge of Inclusion (MER 235, Summer 2005)

The Bush Team Reloaded (MER 234, Spring 2005)

Iran's Clouded Horizons (MER 233, Winter 2004)

The Iraq Impasse (MER 232, Fall 2004)

Two-StateDis/Solution (231, Summer 2004)

Sexuality, Suppression and the State (230, Spring 2004)

International Justice, Local Injustices (229, Winter 2003)

Iraq Under Occupation (228, Fall 2003)

America's Iraq (227, Summer 2003)

Dissent (226, Spring 2003)

In the Shadow of War: Iraq, Israel and Palestine (225, Winter 2002)

Arabs, Muslims and Race in America (224, Fall 2002)

Barriers to Peace (223, Summer 2002)

War Without Borders (222, Spring 2002)

Islam: Images, Politics, Paradox (221, Winter 2001)

Shaky Foundations: The US in the Middle East (220, Fall 2001)

Culture and Politics (219, Summer 2001)

Morocco in Transition (218, Spring 2001)

Beyond Oslo: The New Uprising (217, Winter 2000)

Losing Ground? The Politics of Environment and Space (216, Fall 2000)

Iraq: A Decade of Devastation (215, Summer 2000)

Critiquing NGOs: Assessing the Last Decade (214, Spring 2000)

Millennial Middle East: Changing Orders, Shifting Borders (213, Winter 1999)

Pushing the Limits: Iran's Islamic Revolution at Twenty (212, Fall 1999)

Trafficking and Transiting: New Perspectives on Labor Migration (211, Summer 1999)

Reform or Reaction: Dilemmas of Economic Development in the Middle East (210-Spring 1999)

Behind the Ballot Box: Elections in the Middle East (209-Winter 1998)

Critical Assessments: US Foreign Policy in the Middle East (208-Fall 1998)

Who Paid the Price? 50 Years of Israel (207-Summer 1998)

Power and Sexuality in the Middle East (206-Spring 1998)

Middle East Studies Networks: The Politics of a Field (205-Winter 1997)

The Arabian Peninsula (204-Fall 1997)

Lebanon & Syria: The Geopolitics of Change (203-Spring 1997)

Cairo: Power, Poverty and Urban Survival (202-Winter 1996)

Israel and Palestine: Two States, Bantustans or Binationalism? (201-Fall 1996)

Minorities in the Middle East (200-Summer 1996)

 

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MERIP OP-EDS
Exiting Iraq Is Easier Than They Say
The Nation (web-only)
July 16, 2008
Chris Toensing

The debate over the war in Iraq follows a yellowing script: The minute someone suggests that the US move to withdraw its troops, war supporters cry “Havoc!” True to form, when no less a figure than Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki stated he wants a timeline for a US pullout, John McCain summoned the specter of dire consequences. “I’ve always said we’ll come home with honor and with victory and not through a set timetable,” McCain said. In his major foreign policy speech on July 15, Barack Obama affirmed his support for a withdrawal timetable, adding that the US must “get out as carefully as we were careless getting in.” Obama’s position is the correct one, but he, like many other war critics, has done too little to counter the refrain that withdrawal is simply “cutting and running,” a recipe for disaster. Full Story>>


Presidential Pandering on Palestine
Asheville Citizen-Times
July 4, 2008
Bayann Hamid

At the annual policy conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) earlier this month, presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama competed over who would become the “candidate for Israel.” The match came to a draw when both candidates pledged undying and unconditional support for Israel. While their support for “Israel right or wrong” was unquestionable, at the end of all the commotion, the most pertinent question for Americans and the world remained unasked and unanswered: Who is the candidate for peace? Full Story>>


The Next President's Iran Dilemma
In These Times
February 6, 2008
Chris Toensing

Quick: Who is the strategic victor, to date, of the war in Iraq? Nearly everyone outside the Bush administration (and perhaps some within it) would answer: the Islamic Republic of Iran.

The catastrophe of the U.S. occupation of Iraq has bolstered the clerical regime in Tehran, while souring ordinary Iranians on the prospect of U.S.-delivered “democracy.” The occupation has done so by emplacing Iranian-backed Shiite Islamists in power in Baghdad and cooling the jets of those in Washington hoping to “shock and awe” Iran's mullahs. Full Story>>


Libya's Fat Cat
The Topeka Capital-Journal
Januwary 11, 2008
Chris Toensing

Few dictators in the world are sitting prettier in 2008 than Col. Muammar Qaddafi of Libya. In a region full of potentates and presidents-for-life, his reign is supreme. Having seized power in a 1969 coup, he has ruled his country for longer than any other Arab head of state. And now, as wintry January begins, the colonel has quietly completed his journey back in from the cold. Full Story>>

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