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Israel v. Palestine
After a year spent rattling sabers at the Iranians, I must admit that it was with some small amount of inappropriate relief that violence escalated once again with Palestine. For all the troubles of this, the world's most intractable and hope-dashing conflict, at least Palestine is a predictable enemy. Israel v. Palestine does not involve sleeper cells on American soil, does not threaten the world's oil market, and does not require the direct involvement of the U.S. military.
As I followed the news, I was reminded of the real problem: the Palestine fight didn't just come back; it never went away. The last major fighting between these two peoples ended in early 2009. Since then, Israel reports 2,500 rocket attacks from Gaza militants. 2,500 during a time of what passes for relative peace. Israel's official response came sharply on November 14, with an airstrike that killed Hammas military chief Ahmed Jabari. American press took notice again. Both sides believe that were they to put down their guns, they would soon cease to exist. Both sides have a point.
Two developments this week:
First, the U.N. voted for the first time to officially recognize Palestine as a "non-member observer state" instead of a "non-member observer entity." The vote is purely symbolic, but at an alarming 138-to-9 count, has the added effect of distancing the world from the U.S. on the issue of Palestinian statehood and unilateral Israel support.
Second, a reminder that while the arrow of progress may always move forward, it does so slowly through a barricade of human shit. Today, Israel approved the construction of 3,000 new homes in Jewish settlements in the West Bank and eastern Jerusalem--an act which violates the only real Palestinian condition for peace talks.
Meet Egypt’s New Boss—Same
as the Old Boss?
We in the U.S. were very encouraged by the 2011 Egyptian revolution--so much so that we didn't mind so much that the ousted dictator was our friend and his replacement was not. If ever there was a moment for that new-democratically-elected-leader smell to wear off, it was last Tuesday, when the unpredictable Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi generously granted himself broad, unchecked new powers.
The sad truth is that this may be as bad as it looks, but context still matters. As Huff Po's Neil Hicks writes, a lot of former-dictator Hosni Mubarak power structure is still in place (particularly in the military), and the judiciary isn't nearly as insulated from the nascent and volatile political process as you'd want. Morsi has a constitution to draft and faces obstruction at every turn.
The goals of his power-grab are unsurprising: Morsi needs the power to overrule the judiciary, draft the constitution he wants, and strengthen the Muslim Brotherhood. Equally unsuprising, the public reaction--and so, once again, thousands of protesters fill Cairo's now-famed Tahrir Square.
Obama's New Strategy
Republican operatives leaked Obama’s first proposal to avoid the
“fiscal cliff” (a foretold economic disaster resulting from the simultaneous
expiration of the Bush tax cuts, a decision on the debt ceiling, and the
massive and varied sequestration spending cuts). The notable thing about this
proposal is that it’s essentially the same thing Obama offered in his budget. Republicans are angry—for four years they have gotten used to a
democratic President who offers them most of what they want, then asking for
more. As Ezra Klein writes, the president seems fed up with hopingthat Republicans and the media will appreciate his moderation and, essentially, “negotiatingwith himself.”
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That doesn't do it for the week. It is easy after reading a brief news story to think that you know it all, that the affairs for the world are so big, brush your hands and say "that's just that, end of story." I assure you, that is almost never case. I encourage you to read more, poke around the Sunday papers and reputable news sites, go to your local library and borrow an actual book. For everyone else, the story will end; yours will be just beginning.
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