Tuesday, May 14

Arab spring News : June 28, 2012

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Savir’s Corner: In the aftermath of the Arab Spring
Jerusalem Post
Egypt has been and will continue to be the clear and undisputed leader of the Arabworld.

Fear takes bloom off Arab spring
The Seattle Times
Fear takes bloom off Arab spring. The Arab awakenings happened because the Arab peoples stopped fearing their leaders, writes Thomas L. Friedman, but they stalled because the Arab peoples have not stopped fearing each other. By Thomas L. Friedman 

Is the Arab Spring headed for the Gulf?
Foreign Policy (blog)
By Ayham Kamel and Willis Sparks. When a Tunisian vegetable vendor’s act of suicidal despair ignited fury and demands for change across the Arab world last year, the rulers of Saudi Arabia, the wealthiest and most influential of Arab states, went on 

President Obama’s Arab Spring mess
Kansas.com
A year ago Barack Obama described the epic wave of revolution that had begun in Tunisia and Egypt as “a historic opportunity” for the United States “to pursue the world as it should be.” He said America must promote “c…

Egypt revolt sets back Arab Spring
Sun-Sentinel
Effectively, it is the military that will now govern Egypt pending a new constitution. As for the newly elected president, he can sit in a corner and wait. And wait.

Has the Arab Spring now spread to Sudan?
The Independent
Khartoum is braced for a “make or break” day of demonstrations tomorrow, as anger at the rising cost of living spills over into Arab Spring-style protests on the streets of Sudan’s capital.

An ‘Arab Spring‘ in Sudan?
Alaska Dispatch
Student protests have spread to cities across Sudan, prompted by rising prices for food, housing, and fuel. Will the government’s harsh crackdown backfire and fuel the movement?

What the Arab Spring Taught the World about Supporting Dictatorships
Canada Free Press
What the Arab Spring Taught the World about Supporting Dictatorships, the realist tradeoff between morality and national interests in foreign policy is redefined and challenged by the ongoing Arab Awakening.

A Dark Arab Spring
AINA (press release)
There cannot possibly be anyone left of sound mind who imagines that the Arab Springwas anything more than seismic shifts in various countries to remove unpopular despots; have tribal, sectarian, or ideological bloodletting of different levels of 

The Al Qaeda-Muslim Brotherhood Coalition
FrontPage Magazine
Not long ago the Arab Spring was seen as a harbinger of democracy. It turns out that, instead, it’s creating breeding grounds for international terror—and safe havens for al-Qaeda itself. That is not just a polemical opinion but the somber assessment 


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