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Middle East News on Aug. 15, 2020
Saturday, August 15, 2020
VietPress USA - Source: www.reddit.com:
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Looking back with hindsight, it's quite interesting how Bashar al-Assad and the current regime of Syria didn't collapse in 2011 like so many other nations.
The Tunisian Revolution last for a month and a half
The Egyptian Revolution lasted more or less a month
Gaddafi in Lybia started receiving protests in February and by October was dead.
How did Assad manage to keep his regime from collapse and keep himself in power?
Not to mention that Papandreu of Greece and Berlusconi of Italy also resigned that year, prompting the international community to demand likewise demand Assad, an unpopular leader, to resign and give control of Syria to somebody else.
Why didn't he resign? Like Mubarak and Ben Ali. That unrest could have ended so much earlier.....
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by James M. Dorsey | Aug 10, 2020
This story was first published in Inside Arabia
A podcast version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
China and Saudi Arabia are engaged in a complex game of shadow boxing to shape a future security framework for the Gulf designed to contain regional conflicts. In a bid to ensure plausible deniability, the boxers are for now intellectuals and journalists rather than officials.
China and its Gulf partners appear to be engaged in a game of shadow boxing.
At stake is the future of Gulf security and the management of differences between the region’s conservative monarchies and revolutionary Iran.
With governments passing to one another unofficial subtle messages, intellectuals and journalists are the ones out front in the ring.
In the latest round, Baria Alamuddin, a Lebanese journalist who regularly writes columns for Saudi media, has cast subtlety aside.
Ms. Alamuddin warned in strong and rare anti-Chinese language that China was being lured to financially bankrupt Lebanon by Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shiite militia.
Writing in Arab News, the Saudi Arabia’s primary English-language newspaper, Ms. Alamuddin suggested that the Lebanese Shiite militia’s seduction of China was occurring against the backdrop of a potential massive 25-year cooperation agreement between the People’s Republic and Iran.
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