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The Arabian Peninsula
Middle East Report 204 - July-September 1997
Editorial

ARTICLES
Oil, Gas and the Future of Arab Gulf Countries
    Fareed Mohamedi

The Politics of Economic Adjustment in Kuwait
Yahya Sadowski
Arms Supplies and Military Spending in the Gulf
F. Gregory Gause, III
The Closing of the Arabian Oil Frontier and the Future of Saudi-American Relations
Robert Vitalis
A Clash of Fundamentalisms: Wahhabism in Yemen
Shelagh Weir
Arabia without Sultans Revisited
Fred Halliday
Youth Culture, Commodities and the Use of Public Space in Jiddah
Lisa Wynn
"This is the Bride"
Janine Clark
Bahrain's Crisis Worsens
Joe Stork
Bringing the Peninsula in from the Periphery: From Imagined Scholarship to Gendered Discourse
Gwenn Okruhlik
A New Strategy for the Palestinian "Minority" in Israel
Hatim Kanaaneh and Rhoda Kanaaheh
"Nothing More to Lose:" Landowners, Tenants and Economic Liberalization in Egypt
Karim El-Gawhary
Mediations: M-I-C-K-E-Y S-A-U-`-D
Al Miskin
REVIEW
History as Social Critique in Syrian Film
Robert Blecher
LETTER
Val Moghadam On "The Taliban, the Shari`a and the Pipeline"

 


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MERIP OP-EDS

A Country at a Crossroads
The Austin-American Statesman (Austin, Texas)
November 9, 2007
Kamran Asdar Ali

"A very frank discussion"— so President Bush described his Nov. 7 telephone conversation with Pervez Musharraf, four days after the Pakistani general imposed a state of emergency and dissolved the high court expected to rule his continued presidency unconstitutional. And frank the discussion probably was: In the face of spirited protest in Pakistan, and a querulous press in Washington, back-channel pressure succeeded in persuading Musharraf to promise parliamentary elections. Yet the generous U.S. aid earmarked for Pakistan — on top of nearly $10 billion since 2001 — is quite evidently not at risk.

What may be at risk is Musharraf's tenure as head of the military government. Full story>>


Waging Peace, Step by Step
Garden City Telegram
October 2007
Chris Toensing

The war debate in Washington is bogged down. Partisan rancor is one reason why, and bipartisan desire for US hegemony in the oil-rich Persian Gulf is another. But many Americans are vexed by a nobler concern: that a “precipitous” US departure from Iraq would leave intensified civil war, ethnic-sectarian cleansing and massive refugee flows in its wake. This concern is legitimate. Unfortunately, the sad fact is that Iraq’s civil war and humanitarian emergency have grown steadily worse as the US military deployment there wears on. Full Story>>


Israel's Military Court System Is the Model to Avoid
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

October 28, 2007
Lisa Hajjar

Should the United States, seeking to recalibrate the balance between security and liberty in the "war on terror," emulate Israel in its treatment of Palestinian detainees? That is the position that Guantanamo detainee lawyers Avi Stadler and John Chandler of Atlanta, and some others, have advocated. That people in U.S. custody could be held incommunicado for years without charges, and could be prosecuted or indefinitely detained on the basis of confessions extracted with torture is worse than a national disgrace. It is an assault on the foundations of the rule of law. Full Story>>


Israel's Occupation Remains Poisonous
The Mountain Mail
July 26, 2007
Lori Allen

There is an oft-told Palestinian allegory about a family who complained their house was small and cramped. In response, the father brought the farm animals inside -- the goat, the sheep and the chickens all crowded into the house. Then, one by one, he moved the animals back outside. By the time the last chicken left, the family felt such relief they never complained of the lack of elbow room again. Full Story>>

 

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