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| Lebanon in Limbo |
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Lee Smith,
The Weekly Standard,
(01/11/2008)
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The Arab League has backed the Suleiman presidency, which given the reality on the ground is a non-starter. According to Tony Badran, "It seems increasingly like the Syrians simply avoided criticism in Cairo by appearing to back the Arab consensus while at the same time winking to their Lebanese allies to create old-new hurdles. It afforded Syria, in their view, a measure of deniability."
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Lee Smith,
The Weekly Standard,
(2008/01/11)
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| The Region: The Talking Process Goes On and On |
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Barry Rubin,
The Jerusalem Post,
(04/09/2007)
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The visit's most shameful line was Pelosi saying, "The road to solving Lebanon's problems passes through Damascus." In other words, Lebanon can be fixed only if Syria agrees. Oh, sorry, just sold out Lebanon's independence from Syrian rule and betrayed the aspirations of most Lebanese. As the Lebanese analyst Tony Badran puts it: "This is 'hard-headed realism?' Eating dates, checking out carpets, and taking the official tourist tour with a regime that's killing American soldiers, is a sponsor of every kind of terrorist, stands accused of multiple political assassinations in Lebanon, and is seen as acting like an outlaw by almost every country on earth except Iran?"
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Barry Rubin,
The Jerusalem Post,
(2007/04/09)
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| Iran's Shadow Hovered Over Riyadh |
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The Daily Star, Lebanon,
(03/31/2007)
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The standard for success at Arab summits is, usually, the avoidance of implosion as differences between the various rulers take center stage and eclipse more relevant issues. The end-result is usually a diluted final statement aimed at preserving a facade of Arab solidarity. |
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The Daily Star, Lebanon,
(2007/03/31)
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| Syrian Pressure, Lebanese Blood |
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The Daily Star, Lebanon,
(02/16/2007)
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Two years after the assassination of Lebanon's former prime minister, Rafik Hariri, and 22 others, including former Minister Basil Fuleihan, on Tuesday Lebanon was subjected to another terrorist attack in Ain Alaq, near Bikfaya, home of the Gemayel family. The bombings represented, most probably, another escalation by the Syrian regime.
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The Daily Star, Lebanon,
(2007/02/16)
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Two years after the assassination of Lebanon's former prime minister, Rafik Hariri, and 22 others, including former Minister Basil Fuleihan, on Tuesday Lebanon was subjected to another terrorist attack in Ain Alaq, near Bikfaya, home of the Gemayel family. The bombings represented, most probably, another escalation by the Syrian regime.
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| A History of Violence: Syria reminds Lebanon of their 'special relationship' |
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Lee Smith,
The Weekly Standard,
(02/15/2007)
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The attack, says Tony Badran, may have been a warning to Gemayel. "It may be that the Syrians thought Gemayel was going to Washington to campaign to replace Lahoud as president, and Damascus showed they would literally kill to stop it," says Badran. "It wouldn't be the first time. Remember that in 2004 Asad reportedly threatened Hariri that 'only he appoints the Lebanese president.' If not, as he told Hariri, 'he would break Lebanon over his head."
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Lee Smith,
The Weekly Standard,
(2007/02/15)
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| Three-Layered Conflicts |
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National Review Online,
(12/13/2006)
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The conventional wisdom is that every crisis in Lebanon has three dimensions: domestic, regional, and international. The current crisis in that country is a good example of this.
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National Review Online,
(2006/12/13)
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The conventional wisdom is that every crisis in Lebanon has three dimensions: domestic, regional, and international. The current crisis in that country is a good example of this.
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| A Puzzling Run for President in Lebanon |
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The Los Angeles Times,
(12/06/2006)
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If you're lucky enough not to be obsessed with Middle East politics, you may be surprised to learn that the keynote speaker at Hezbollah's massive Beirut demonstration last week was not a Shiite Muslim but a Maronite Christian. Michel Aoun, the army general who was driven into exile by Syria in 1990 but has been oddly friendly with Syria and its local allies since his return to Lebanon last year, addressed an overwhelmingly Shiite crowd and called for the resignation of Sunni Prime Minister Fouad Siniora.
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The Los Angeles Times,
(2006/12/06)
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| The Return of US-Egypt Dialogue |
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Al-Masri Al-Youm,
(07/25/2006)
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CLIME Senior Fellow Khairi Abaza comments on Egypt's role in the current Middle East crisis: "The Egyptian-American strategic dialogue - resumed during the visit of Egypt's Foreign Affairs minister - focused on the situation in Lebanon. Generaly speaking, Egypt is an ally of the United States and there is an understanding on foreign policy matters between the two countries; unlike matters related to internal Egyptian politics where the two countries hold different views."
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| Saudi-Syrian Relations after Hariri |
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The Mideast Monitor,
(02/01/2006)
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If there is one seemingly immutable rule of diplomatic relations in the Middle East, it is that Arab governments vehemently reject outside efforts to censure one of their own.
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The Mideast Monitor,
(2006/02/01)
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