Shallow Commitment (video) admin, May 24, 2011August 17, 2024 RT News Dr. Stephen Zunes appears in the second video Continue Reading
Letters and Politics (audio) admin, May 24, 2011August 17, 2024 KPFA Radio Dr. Stephen Zunes enters at the 26 minute mark Continue Reading
Obama’s Middle East Speech (audio) admin, May 23, 2011August 21, 2024 China Radio International Continue Reading
Obama’s Mideast Speech: Two Steps Back, One Step Forward admin, May 22, 2011August 21, 2024 Although President Barack Obama’s May 19 address on U.S. Middle East policy had a number of positive elements, overall it was a major disappointment. His speech served as yet another reminder that his administration’s approach to the region differs in several important ways from that of his immediate predecessor, but he failed to consistently assert principled U.S. support for human rights, democracy, or international law. Continue Reading
Two Views on Obama’s Speech on Mideast (audio) admin, May 20, 2011August 21, 2024 The Peter B. Collins Show Continue Reading
Mitchell’s Inevitable Resignation admin, May 16, 2011September 1, 2024 At age 77, George Mitchell’s resignation as President Barack Obama’s envoy on Arab-Israeli affairs may have indeed been for personal reasons, as he claimed. More likely, however, it came out of frustration at the Obama administration’s failure to pressure the right-wing Israeli government to make the necessary compromises for peace. Continue Reading
Yemen on the Edge admin, May 13, 2011September 1, 2024 Since Obama came to office in January 2009, U.S. security assistance to the Yemeni regime has gone up 20-fold. Despite such large-scale unconditional support, however, the 32-year reign of autocratic President Ali Abdullah Saleh may finally be coming to an end. Yet the Obama administration has been ambivalent in its support for a democratic transition in this impoverished but strategically important country. Continue Reading
The Killing of Bin Laden and the Threat of Al Qaeda admin, May 5, 2011September 1, 2024 The killing of Al-Qaeda founder and leader Osama bin Laden is not likely to have a profound impact one way or the other in the struggle against the terrorist organization and its allied groupings. On the one hand, Al-Qaeda may face a potential leadership void and internal divisions. On the other hand, the organization has decentralized in the ten years since the United States and allied forces drove them from their sanctuaries in Afghanistan and terrorist cells operate independently from bin Laden’s leadership and a whole new generation of terrorists subscribing to the apocalyptic and genocidal ideology has sprung up as a result of the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq. Continue Reading