Bahrain Foreign Min. Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, left, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Donald Trump, and UAE Foreign Min. Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan at the Abraham Accords signing, the White House, Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020. AP Photo/Alex Brandon
Ahmed Charai, The Hill: Abraham Accords: New hope for peace in Middle East
The historic signing of peace agreements among Israel, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates at the White House yesterday confounded diplomats and experts on three continents. It marks a true turning point in Middle East affairs.
Count me among many Arabs who have long believed that the peace plan deserves a chance – albeit one of the few who says so publicly. I have held this view to the surprise of many American, Israeli, and Palestinian friends.
Americans I know disparage the architects — led by Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner — as too young and inexperienced to develop a viable solution.
Read more ....
Commentaries, Analysis, And Analysis -- September 16, 2020
How Trump Defied the Experts and Forged a Breakthrough in the Middle East -- Rich Lowry, National Review
Creating a New Middle East -- Yaakov Katz, Jerusalem Post
Stumbling Out of the Middle East is No Better Than Stumbling In -- Jon B. Alterman, Defense One
How to Do More With Less in the Middle East. American Policy in the Wake of the Pandemic -- Mara Karlin and Tamara Cofman Wittes, Foreign Affairs
The F-35 Triangle: America, Israel, the United Arab Emirates -- Barbara A. Leaf and Dana Stroul, War On The Rocks
Turkey’s Hyperactivity Echoes Through Mideast -- Kuperwasser & Ben-David, JCPA
Yoshihide Suga: The unexpected rise of Japan’s new prime minister -- Rupert Wingfield-Hayes, BBC News
The US-China tech cold war has turned hot – but would a Biden presidency change things for Huawei and others? -- Yujie Xue and Celia Chen in Shenzhen, SCMP
Five things from EU chief’s first State of the Union speech -- BBC
Foreign-policy sleepwalking: Wake up to Germany no longer being such a good ally -- John C. Hulsman, The Hill
Belarus: what is the mood like in the country? -- The Guardian
Niger: Fear of terror — and the military -- Silja Fröhlich, DW
How the Islamic State found a haven in Syrian desert -- Sultan al-Kanj, Al-Monitor
Oil Demand Has Collapsed, And It Won't Come Back Any Time Soon -- Camila Domonoske, NPR
5 comments:
Chinese Regime ‘Weaponizing’ Tibet’s Rivers, Choking Asia’s Water Supply
This problem will not go away in the news unless Slo-Jo gets elected.
"Major Hasan came to the attention of the FBI for the 18 emails he sent to jihadist al-Awlaki. That rang alarms at the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force in San Diego, and agents alerted the Washington Field Office, which dropped the case. No word who gave the order, and whether they were ever held accountable. The president did not fire FBI boss Robert Mueller, who later gained fame as head of the Russia collusion probe."
Did an FBI employee drop the ball or did Mueller squash it? We will never know as Mueller himself is very much like Joe, He doesn't do so well nowadays.
Old liberal bravely shoots young 18 year old liberal in the back of the head.
Why?
Because racism.
Black Lives Matter Bail Fund Promoted By Kamala Harris Bailed Out a Man Who Raped an 8-Year-Old Girl
Democrats are pro-choice and pro-rape.
It is all becoming very clear and and very consistent
Building Owner Pulls Out of Contract on Minneapolis Police Precinct Location after Black Lives Matter Thugs Vandalize Building then Threaten His Home
Putin, the asshole, looks very much better than any Democrat.
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