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SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS

Report of the Task Force for a Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq June 2008 [Click to view PDF]


Primer on Palestine, Israel and the Arab-Israeli Conflict
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Who Paid the Price: 50 Years of Israel
Middle East Report 207 - Summer 1998

Editorial

ARTICLES
Constructing an International Criminal Court
   
Joe Stork

Alternatives to an International Criminal Court
   
Lisa Hajjar

Al Miskin

Democracy or Ethnocracy?
   
Oren Yiftachel

Fifty Years Through the Eyes of "New Historians" in Israel
   
Ilan Pappe

Countering Israel's 50th on the Internet
   
Steve Niva

Deir Yassin Remembered
   
Phyllis Bennis

Dis/Solving the "Refugee Problem"
   
Rosemary Sayigh

The Myth of Gender Equality and the Limits of Women's Political Dissent in Israel
   
Simona Sharoni

Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Arab Women, Liberal Feminism and the Israeli State
   
Lisa Hajjar

US Aid to Israel
   
Phyllis Bennis

The Contradictions of Economic Reform in Israel
   
Michael Shalev

The Enigmas of Shas
   
Graham Usher

Tensions in Iran: The Future of the Islamic Revolution
   
Olivier Roy

From Schmaltz to Sacrilege - Rubber Bullets
   
Rebecca Stein

To Clear the Minefield - Notes from the Minefield
   
Karen Pfeifer

LETTER
Funding and Middle East Studies in Europe
   
Drewery Dyke

Israeli police arrest a Palestinian demonstrator in Jerusalem during al-Nakba Day demonstrations, May 14, 1998. (Menahem Kahana/Agence France Presse)

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MERIP OP-EDS

A Battleground for the Foreseeable Future
Bitter Lemons International
September 11, 2008
Chris Toensing

Bob Woodward’s four books chronicling the wars of President George W. Bush are sensitive barometers of conventional wisdom in Washington. Whereas the first volume, published in 2002 at the height of the self-righteous nationalism gripping the capital after the September 11, 2001 attacks, hailed Bush’s self-confidence in acting to protect the homeland, the 2008 installment depicts the same man as cocksure and incurious. This much is not news. More educational are Woodward’s hints about the worldviews that will outlast this unpopular administration, embedded in the organs of the national security state. Full Story>>


Egypt Stifles Debate in the United States
Northwest Arkansas Times
August 27, 2008
Bayann Hamid

The Egyptian regime has once again succeeded in stifling freedom of speech, this time not in Egypt, but in the US. Earlier this month, an Egyptian court convicted a prominent Egyptian-American activist for his outspoken criticism of the regime’s poor human rights record in American public fora. The court accused Saad Eddin Ibrahim, of "tarnishing Egypt's image" abroad. The conviction referred primarily to writings he published in the foreign press; most notably among them an August 2007 op-ed in the Washington Post in which he criticized Egypt's human rights record and questioned the reasons behind US aid to Egypt. Full Story>>


Want to Fight Terrorism? Think Globally, Act Locally
Globe and Mail (Toronto),
August 4, 2008
Khalid Mustafa Medani

Militant Islam is under global scrutiny for clues to conditions that foster its rise, and to strategies for reversing that growth. But the key is not in Islamic doctrine, US foreign policy or formal ties to various nations, as many analysts have asserted. It lies at the community level, with clan and local leaders. Full Story>>


Iraq’s Kurds Have to Choose
Globe and Mail (Toronto)
July 30, 2008
Joost Hiltermann

Kurdish parties have become kingmakers in Baghdad , and they know it. As no federal government can work without them, they are pulling every available political lever to expand the territory and resources they control, trying to build the foundation of an independent Kurdish state. But even more than territory, they need security. If everyone acts quickly and wisely, that understanding could help resolve one of the Iraq war’s thorniest issues. Full Story>>


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>>

 

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