Friday, May 25, 2012

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials -- May 25, 2012

Representatives of the P5+1 group meet with Iran's negotiating team (R) in Baghdad on May 23, 2012. Press TV

After More Iranian Stalling, What’s Next? -- Jennifer Rubin, Washington Post

It’s hard to take the administration seriously on Iran when it continually reveals how little it understands the Iranian regime and how absence is any sense of urgency. The Wall Street Journal reports:

What we’re looking for is progress,” said Jay Carney, the White House spokesman. “We’re looking for seriousness on the part of the Iranians in terms of addressing the concerns of the international community. And thus far, those expectations have been met.”

Read more ....

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials

While West Talks, Iran Gets Closer to Nuke -- Jonathan S. Tobin, Commentary

Inside Iran: A view from the booming, modern streets of Tehran -- Paul Koring, Globe and Mail

Beyond Bashar, Syria’s rebels are facing far more significant resistance -- Charles Rizk, The Daily Star

Inside Jordan, worries about Iran and Syria -- Barbara Starr, CNN

Sleepless in Jerusalem: Egypt's presidential elections are keeping Israeli officials awake at night. Will their most important Arab friend soon be an enemy? -- Oren Kessler, Foreign Policy

Revolution, what revolution, asks Egyptians – but the liberals lost for a reason we can all learn from -- Richard Spencer, The Telegraph

'What happened to the revolution?' Egypt left facing choice between Islamists and Mubarak's last prime minister -- Ricahrd Spencer, The Telegraph

The idiot's guide to Egypt's election -- David Kenner, Foreign Policy

Pirates or hawks: Who hijacked Chinese boats? -- Leonid Petrov, Asia Times

Uribe vs. Santos feud could cripple Colombia -- Andres Oppenheimer, Miami Herald

Did Serbia vote for war?
-- Jeffrey T. Kuhner, The Washington Times

What Happened to Russia’s Grand Bargain? -- Seth Mandel, Commentary

Let's Face the Facts: Greece Is Cooked, Along With Merkel -- Victor Sperandeo, Forbes

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