Thursday, January 4, 2018

Commentaries, Analysis, And Editorials -- January 4, 2018

Kareem Shaheen, The Guardian: Saudi Arabia and Iran's rivalry is key to the Middle East in 2018

Regional chaos is set to continue with no solution in sight to Yemen crisis and power struggle over shape of post-war Syria

Another turbulent year in the Middle East has drawn to a close, but there will be no respite in 2018 from the regional chaos that is underpinned by the inflamed rivalry of Saudi Arabia and Iran.

The young crown prince Mohammed bin Salman has consolidated power, embarking on an unprecedented cultural revolution and economic reforms in Riyadh, but his foreign policy ambitions have yet to bear fruit. Instead they will continue to sap lives and resources in neighbouring Yemen, the Arab world’s poorest country, unless a political settlement is reached.

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Commentaries, Analysis, And Editorials -- January 4, 2018

Why there won’t be a revolution in Iran -- Pepe Escobar, Asia Times

Washington has a duty to assist Iranian protesters in staying digitally connected -- Ted Gover, The Hill

What do Iran protests mean for President Rouhani? -- AFP

Iran’s Protests have Shocked the World. Will They Do More Than That? -- Joshua Keating, Slate

Tehran Can’t ‘Paint Over’ Latest Unrest -- Norman T. Roule, The Cipher Brief

Palestinians are watching Saudi Arabia closely -- Adnan Abu Amer, Al Jazeera

Dear America: Don't fall for Pyongyang's predictable, poisonous ploy -- Sung-Yoon Lee, The Hill

Why we need a new approach to North Korea -- David Carden, Politico

There’s still time for diplomacy in Korea -- John Glaser, Reuters

Coming to Grips With a Rising China -- Ramon Marks, RCD

Turning the Corner in Afghanistan -- Robert Mihara, The Bridge

China dangles trade threat over Australia -- Alan Boyd, Asia Times

The tragedy and blessing that is Trump -- Larry Beinhartby, Al Jazeera

Trump’s National Security Strategy marks return to realism -- Norman A. Bailey, Asia Times

Why the MoneyGram Merger Was a Threat: Consumer data, increasingly, is a national-security concern. -- Christopher Balding, Bloomberg

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