• Egypt
    Regional Voices: Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, and Tunisia
    “Their lives are worthless when it comes to the interests of Egypt and Egyptians…I am a president after a revolution, meaning that we can sacrifice a few so the country can move forward. It is absolutely no problem.” –Egyptian president Mohammad Morsi responding to violent clashes between members of the opposition and the Muslim Brotherhood “Yesterday I was really surprised by the comment issued from the White House that it was not possible to increase the range of the Patriot missiles to protect the Syrian people…I’m scared that this will be a message to the Syrian regime telling it ’Do what you want’.” –Moaz Alkhatib, leader of the Syrian National Coalition, in an interview with Reuters “Sometimes…a girl contributes 100 percent to her own raping when she puts herself in these conditions.” –Adel Abdel Maqsoud Afifi, an Egyptian police general, lawmaker and ultraconservative Islamist “Homs is burning and no one cares.” –An unidentified Syrian activist “All those you attacked in your interview in Al-Akhbar are more honorable than you, even Antoine Lahd because while he only collaborated with Israel, you served as an agent for Abu Ammar [Yasser Arafat] – the late head of the Palestinian Authority – as well as for ousted [late] Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi and the Soviets and the U.S. and Syrian President Bashar Assad and Israel.” –Free Patriotic Movement representative Naji Hayek speaking about Progressive Social leader Walid Jumblatt “The majority want a compromise…It’s impossible to bring things back under control as they were.” –Roaa Salem discussing the views of fellow students at Damascus University on the Syrian civil war “I think they need a second revolution…We prefer not to choose from bourgeois political parties.” – Armazan Tulunay, a young revolutionary socialist at the World Social Forum at Manara University in Tunisa
  • Lebanon
    Weekend Reading: A Resignation in Lebanon, Corruption in Libya, and Conflict in Morocco
    Elias Muhanna, of Qifa Nabki, gives his perspective on the recent resignation of Lebanese PM, Najib Mikati. The Risky Shift comments on corruption in Libya, and provides steps forward to improve it. Mohamed Daadaoui analyzes the Western Sahara-Morocco conflict and evaluates Javier Bardem’s 2012 documentary on the topic.
  • Israel
    Voices From the Region: Jordan, Iran, Lebanon, Syria, Israel
    “We don’t want old faces. We tried that…We are worried…We can help Jordan not go the same way as Syria and Egypt.” –Khalid Hammad, 28, a lawyer who voted in Amman, in support of a friend, a fellow lawyer who was a first-time candidate “This assembly has the same credentials of the previous one in its weakness and lack of will in practicing its constitutional role in legislation and making governments accountable.” –Deputy Chief of the Brotherhood Zaki Bani Rusheid dismissing the newly elected Jordanian parliament “Don’t buy our oil? To hell with you…It’s better if you don’t buy...Ten times more money will head to people’s pockets through the inventions of our scientists.” –Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad addressing a group of Iranians in the western city of Hamedan “We see in the arenas of Arab regions, men who are ahead of us. They fought for and achieved freedom and democracy…But we remain prisoners of a fake democracy that carries with it the ugliest forms of complex dictatorship, horrible sectarianism practices, and wait-and-see and speculative policies.” –Grand Mufti of Lebanon Sheikh Mohammad Qabbani in a statement “I am Kurdish, and as a Kurdish citizen I am fighting side to side with the Free Syrian Army, because you cannot find anybody who was not stepped on by the regime, or was not wronged.” –Yousef Haidar, 72, village elder of Alghooz, Syria  “I didn’t realize until I entered [Syria] and moving around just how much has been destroyed already of the very vital infrastructure for the functioning of a society.” –John Ging, operations director at the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), in a news conference in Beirut “If we want to founder from the outset, and embark upon endless internal struggles, then make foreign policy the top priority…If we want the government to be effective and accomplish things, and leave a strong, significant imprint, I think everyone understands the need for domestic changes is dramatic, and that is the order of the day. So leave the foreign issues aside.” –former Israeli foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman on Israel Radio “It’s a national wedding in Jordan, with the bride being the new parliament.” –Amman housewife Basma Edwan, 32, as she enthusiastically cast her ballot
  • United States
    How Not to Help Lebanon
    A bombing today in Beirut assassinated the head of the Intelligence Bureau of that country’s Internal Security Forces, Wissam Hassan, a Sunni officer who was a leading foe of the Assad regime and of Hezbollah. The White House has now issued the following statement : Statement by NSC Spokesman Tommy Vietor on Attack in Beirut The United States condemns in the strongest terms the terrorist attack today in Beirut that killed Lebanese Internal Security Forces Information Bureau Director Wissam al-Hassan and at least seven others, and wounded dozens more.  Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and friends of those killed and injured in this heinous attack and with the Lebanese people, who have sacrificed greatly to overcome war and violence.  Lebanon’s security and stability are vital both for the Lebanese people and their neighbors.  There is no justification for using assassination as a political tool.  The United States will stand by the Government of Lebanon and the people of Lebanon as they work to bring those responsible for this barbaric attack to justice and build a future where all Lebanese can live in security and dignity. What’s wrong with this statement? 1. It is not a statement by the President, or the Secretary of State, or the National Security Advisor. Instead it is a press release by the NSC spokesman, not even by White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.  All this suggests that this attack is pretty low on the agenda of the White House. 2. The statement makes no mention of Syria, when Wissam Hassan was an opponent of the Assad regime and when every single news story on this murder notes that it is a clear sign that the war in Syrian war is now destabilizing Lebanon. 3. The statement speaks of Lebanon’s "security and stability." What about the country’s sovereignty, which Assad’s forces are violating every day--including with this assassination? What about democracy in Lebanon, which reappeared after the murder of Rafik Hariri in 2005, and is under threat now from Syria and Hezbollah? 4. The statement says "Lebanon’s security and stability are vital both for the Lebanese people and their neighbors." Logically, this would suggest that they aren’t important to us: we aren’t Lebanese and we aren’t their neighbors. Yet the United States has long viewed Lebanon’s fate as an important one for us, not just for Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Turkey. So the message, like the messenger (the NSC spokesman) tends to undermine America’s past, present, and future role. 5. In the aftermath of a vicious and brutal murder like this, some platitudes just make things worse. We will "stand by the people of Lebanon" so they can build a future of "security and dignity?" Again, that future apparently does not include national sovereignty or democracy, both at risk today from Hezbollah and the Assad regime. And the term "stand by" them is so vague as to have no meaning at all. Lebanese patriots seeing this statement must be disheartened. They deserve sympathy, and genuine help--which would begin with genuine help to the rebels seeking to bring the Assad regime to an end.
  • Middle East and North Africa
    Syria’s New Attack on Lebanon
    Fears are expressed almost every day that the war in Syria will spread to Lebanon, or to all of Syria’s neighbors. The problem, however, is not that the war "will spread" as if by nature, inevitably, the way spilled water spreads, but that it will be spread--deliberately, by the Assad regime. And that is indeed what is happening. The assassination in Beirut of Wissam Hassan, by a huge car bomb, is only the latest in a long series of such murders of critics of the Assad regime. Hassan was a senior intelligence official, a Sunni, and the man who led the investigation of the murder in 2005 of former prime minister Rafik Hariri. That investigation led to the uncovering of evidence implicating both the Assad regime in Syria, and Hezbollah. How are we to understand what is happening in Lebanon? A Lebanese friend wrote me as follows today: "Lebanon is witnessing a return to the 2005-2008 period when Assad and Nasrallah, feeling that they were losing ground, orchestrated their series of political assassinations, bombings, armed clashes....until they finally got what they wanted through the Doha accord. Then miraculously all violence stopped. Now that they are losing again, they are resorting to the same tactics: assassinations attempts against March 14, Michel Samaha’s bombing plot, Tripoli’s fighting, weapons distribution by the Hezbollah to various militias and yesterday Wissam Hassan’s assassination. "Wissam will be the third IB (Information Branch) chief targeted after Samir Shahade and Wissam Eid. This is a terrible blow to the intelligence-security efforts in Lebanon against Bashar and his gang. The Information Branch is the only Lebanese security agency truly confronting the threats coming from Assad and Hezbollah. They deserve our unconditional support if we care to win our battle against the Iranian and Syrian regimes in Lebanon." Murder in Beirut is nothing new for the Assad regime; it is how Sunni and Christian opponents are dealt with. This car bomb killing in Beirut is only the latest piece of evidence as to why Assad’s survival threatens regional stability. Well over a year ago the President of the United States said Assad must go. It is time the United States adopted an active policy that would bring that day closer--saving thousands more lives in Syria and the lives of American allies in Lebanon as well.
  • Egypt
    Weekend Reading: Deja Vu in Egypt?, Lebanese Security, and Jihadists in Syria
    Ibrahim El-Houdaiby wonders if Egypt’s Islamists will make the same mistakes as previous regimes. Qifa Nabki offers an interesting profile of Wissam al-Hassan, the head of Lebanon’s Information Branch of the Internal Security Forces, who was assassinated in today’s attack in Beirut. Aaron Y. Zelin discusses the increasing internet presence of Jihadists in Syria.  
  • Lebanon
    Film Discussion: "Tomorrow We Will See"
    Play
    Shibley Telhami and film director Soraya Umewaka discuss the film Tomorrow We Will See, which follows a new generation of artists and designers living in Beirut.
  • Lebanon
    Film Screening and Discussion: Tomorrow We Will See
    Play
    Please join Shibley Telhami and film director Soraya Umewaka for a screening and discussion of the film Tomorrow We Will See, which follows a new generation of artists and designers living in Beirut.
  • Middle East and North Africa
    Who Will Speak Up for Lebanon?
    Lebanon’s sovereignty and its territorial integrity were for decades violated by Syria, during the years of Syrian occupation: 1976 to 2005. After the occupation ended, the Assad regime in Syria continued to intervene in Lebanon, but less openly--for example by secretly arranging the murders a long series of Lebanese leaders and journalists who opposed Syrian interests. But now, while Syria is mired in a bloody conflict between the populace and the Assad regime, Syrian intervention in Lebanon is both more open and less bearable. In addition of course to creating the problem of coping with Syrian refugees (a problem shared with Jordan and Turkey), the Syrian military continues to violate Lebanon’s borders with impunity. As the Aspen Institute’s Weekly Lebanon Round-Up just reported, Syrian reconnaissance jets flew over the Lebanese border towns this week, escalating tensions between the two sides. The raids took place as U.N. Special Coordinator to Lebanon Derek Plumbly toured the area to check up on Syrian refugees. Last week, Syrian troops entered the Lebanese town of Arsal and attacked Lebanon’s Army post. (Go here to subscribe.) There is more: the Wall Street Journal has reported that "Syrian warplanes fired missiles into Lebanese territory" just ten days ago. What could Lebanon do? The Weekly Lebanon Round-Up, produced jointly with the Lebanon Renaissance Foundation, suggests: For one, Lebanon could choose to proceed with filing complaints against Syria for its violations of Lebanese sovereignty. Lebanon could also explore the option of deploying UNIFIL forces along the Syrian border, in order to support the military’s defense efforts and stabilize border towns. The Prime Minister could also summon the Syrian Ambassador in Beirut, who has accused Lebanese groups of complicity in the Syrian conflict, to reprimand him over the recent aggression. But of these, Lebanon has done none. Fear of Syria and fear of Hezbollah are part of the explanation, for the terrorist group remains not only a steadfast supporter of Assad but a direct participant in Syria’s war. To me this Lebanese silence is reminiscent of the situation during the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, which was caused when Hezbollah violated the Israeli border and captured and killed Israeli soldiers. When U.S. officials told Lebanon’s then-prime minister Siniora that all we needed to start putting together an international force to keep the peace, patrol the borders, and defend Lebanese sovereignty was his request for such a force, he balked. Do I really have to ask, he said to us--fearful no doubt of the reactions of both Syria and Hezbollah. In the language so many Lebanese speak, "plus ca change...." But things should change, and Lebanon’s leaders should this time rise to the challenge and defend their nation’s borders and sovereignty. I suggested above that two things, fear of Syria and fear of Hezbollah, explain in part why they do not. Here is the third part: lack of faith in us. That is, they fear that if they stand up to Syria they will not get the support they need from the United States, the UN, France, the EU, Turkey and others in a position to back their demands. Those who ask what good a no-fly zone would do should consider this: one very simple standard to be imposed would be that the sovereignty of the Assad regime’s neighbors may no longer be violated at will. I believe Lebanon’s leaders would be far more likely to ask for help if they believed they would actually then receive it. Sadly, there is today little reason for them to reach that conclusion--so the shame is ours more than theirs.
  • Iran
    Hezbollah Fighters in Syria
    While there has been considerable discussion in the United States about jihadis who may be fighting in Syria against the Assad regime, less attention has been paid to the presence of Hezbollah fighters acting on the side of that regime. Asharq Alawsat, the London Arabic-language newspaper, reports on this issue today in a story entitled "FSA: Hezbollah fighters in Syria, carrying out raids." According to the FSA, the Free Syrian Army, there are also Iranian elements present. What are they doing? According to the newspaper’s sources, the Iranian are providing technical advice and assistance: "there are also Iranian specialists present in the northern areas [of Syria] close to the Turkish borders who have set-up operation rooms…in order to intercept the telephone calls of activists and FSA members...the Iranian specialists’ tasks include training, communication operations and uncovering activists." But the Hezbollah men are operational: they are snipers. I have had the same report from official sources in the region, and believe it. Given the importance of Syria to Iran and Hezbollah, it is not surprising that they are willing to fight to preserve the Assad regime. As we debate whether to offer non-lethal and lethal aid to the opposition, the intervention of Iran and Hezbollah on the Assad side and against the people of Syria ought to weigh heavily. A failure to offer adequate assistance is tantamount to saying that a victory for Iran and Hezbollah in Syria is acceptable to us, and a lesson to dictators everywhere to keep on killing. That would be a disastrous policy for the United States to adopt.
  • Lebanon
    Will Assad Return To Killing Lebanese Leaders?
    Throughout the past decade there have been a series of assassinations and attempted murders of political leaders in Lebanon. Almost all of these plots have one common element: the person whose life was threatened or taken was anti-Assad, and just about everyone in Lebanon believes Syria was behind or involved in the wave of violence. Former prime minister Rafik Hariri was assassinated by a truck bomb in February 2005. In June, the prominent journalist Samir Kassir of the newspaper al Nahar was murdered , the first of a series of Christians who were attacked. A bomb was placed in his car. In December 2005 Gebran Tueni, publisher of al Nahar, a Christian member of parliament and relentless critic of Assad, was killed by a remote-controlled car bomb. In June 2006 the Christian cabinet member and critic of Syria Pierre Gemayel, from one of the leading Maronite families, was gunned down. In June 2007 Walid Eido, a Sunni affiliated with the Hariri-led “March 14 movement” and a critic of Syria, was murdered using a car bomb. In September 2007 a car bomb killed Antoine Ghanem, a Christian member of parliament and enemy of Syria. In December 2007 a car bomb killed Gen. Francois al-Hajj, a Christian who was the number two officer in the Lebanese Army. The pattern was simple: these were Lebanese who resisted Syria’s efforts to control Lebanon. These were some of the successful killings, and there were failed attempts in addition. A car bomb in October 2004 badly wounded Marwan Hamadeh and killed his driver. Hamadeh is a member of parliament and former cabinet minister known as a critic of Syrian influence and affiliated with Druze leader Walid Jumblatt. Press reports in March suggested that Syria is now trying to arrange for Jumblatt to be assassinated. A car bomb in September 2005 badly injured May Chidiac, a Christian journalist who was a long time opponent of Syrian domination of Lebanon. This is not an exhaustive list, but it is a timely reminder. For just today an assassination attempt was made against Samir Geagea, a Christian leader who is perhaps the fiercest foe of the Assads. Under pressure in the first decade of this century, Assad turned to having Lebanese opponents killed. Under pressure again now, the bullets fired at Geagea may be a sign that Assad is returning to his previous practices. Geagea will know how to protect himself and we can only wish him luck in defeating more attempts on his life. But that effort to kill him is a reminder of the bloody history of Bashar al Assad and of the need to bring his regime to an end.
  • Politics and Government
    Weekend Reading: Lebanon in Limbo, Egypt’s NGOs Report, and the Abaya Remix
    Makram Rabah looks at the possible effect of Syria’s revolution on Lebanon. The Project on Middle East Democracy’s report: The Campaign Against NGOs in Egypt. Manar Al Hinai sheds light on the new abaya fashion world.
  • Lebanon
    Nasrallah Backs Down
    On July 2, the Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah had this to say about the UN’s Special tribunal on Lebanon, which is investigating the murder of former prime minister Rafik Hariri: the tribunal is part of the war against us, because we are leading a confrontation against Israel….The most dangerous goal of this tribunal is to create strife, a civil war in Lebanon, or especially a division between the Sunni and Shiite in Lebanon. He has also said the Tribunal is “trying to destroy the human and social fabric of Lebanon,”  and called on all Lebanese to boycott it: I call on every official and every citizen in Lebanon to boycott those investigators and not to cooperate with them ... because all that is being offered to them reaches the Israelis. Continuing cooperation with those encourages more violations of the country and helps with the aggression against the resistance. In January of this year, “Mr Nasrallah told a TV audience that Lebanese judges, funding and obligations to the tribunal must be removed.” Now something has changed. Today’s press in Lebanon reports that: Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah Thursday said the party will not trigger a crisis over the funding of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon despite its continued opposition to the move. ‘In a bid to preserve political stability and to keep the government intact while reaffirming our opposition [to the court] ... We don’t accept the funding but we will not create a problem, Nasrallah said during a televised speech. What happened to those fiery words of yesteryear? Simple: the Syrian uprising. Nasrallah and Hezbollah will be among the great losers if the Assad regime is toppled, along with Iran and of course the Assad clan itself. Without Syrian support and the use of Syria for storage and delivery of weaponry from Iran, Hezbollah will be weaker. We can also see this in the maneuvering of Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, once a Syrian ally. As recently as January the headlines were “Lebanon Druze leader Walid Jumblatt sides with Hezbollah in crisis.” As one report summarized, “Just a year ago, Jumblatt was Syria’s most vocal critic, a man who dared, long before others, to call for the downfall of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, whose father most likely ordered the assassination of Jumblatt’s dad during Lebanon’s civil war. Then, last January, Jumblatt did a spectacular about face, siding with the Syrian and Iranian-backed Hezbollah against his former West-leaning allies.” But by October, “Walid Jumblatt severely criticized the Syrian regime during a concert that he hosted for his friends in the city of Jbeil. Jumblatt reportedly picked up the microphone and addressed his guests by saying: “Unfortunately, we are now enjoying music while the Syrian people are revolting against oppression and tyranny.” And Jumblatt has now applauded the funding of the Tribunal, which is another step away from Syria and Hezbollah. When the Hezbollah leader, who has repeatedly plunged Lebanon in to crisis and into war, now has to say “we will not create a problem,” tectonic plates are moving in the Middle East. Without understating Hezbollah’s strength and viciousness, the crisis of the Assad regime in Syria has already reduced its power. Assad’s fall will reduce it more. This is yet another reason why the United States should be doing all we can to bring Assad down, the sooner the better.  
  • Yemen
    Weekend Reading: Saleh Comes Home, Palestine Is Born?, and Redistricting in Lebanon
      Anti-government protesters shout slogans during a rally to demand the ouster of Yemen's President Saleh in Sanaa (Khaled Abdullah Ali Al Mahdi/Courtesy Reuters) Gregory Johnson on Saleh’s return to Yemen. Khodor Salameh writes on “the joke of Palestinian statehood.” Qifa Nabki on the issue of proportional representation to Lebanon’s next elections.
  • Turkey
    Weekend Reading: Syrians in Lebanon, Salafis Flex Muscles, and Turkey’s Officers Don’t Like the U.S.
    A defected Yemeni soldier who joined sides the anti-regime protesters reads the Koran near the entrance to Taghyeer Square in Sanaa (Jumanah El-Heloueh/Courtesy Reuters) A first-hand account of the dispersion of protesters outside the Syrian Embassy in Beirut from Jadaliyya. Lauren Bohn writes for Foreign Policy about Salafis in Egypt. Emre Uslu writes on Today’s Zaman about the Turkish Military encouraging anti-Americanism in Turkey.