Even if the latest attempt at negotiating and end to Syria's civil war don't make any progress, at least Iran's inclusion has upped the entertainment factor. First, the Iranians are making noises about walking away from the talks because Saudi Arabia is being too "negative": Iran said on Monday it would quit Syria peace talks … Continue reading Negotiating games
Author: DWD
This weekend’s other Turkic national elections
This wasn't only a good weekend for Tayyip Erdoğan's Justice and Development Party in Turkey; Azerbaijan's ruling New Azerbaijan Party also won big in that country's parliamentary elections yesterday, taking a majority of the seats in the parliament. New Azerbaijan (Yeni Azərbaycan Partiyası in Azeri, a close-ish linguistic relative of Turkish) is the party of … Continue reading This weekend’s other Turkic national elections
Today in Middle Eastern history: the Balfour Declaration (1917)
It was on November 2, 1917, when British Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour sent a relatively brief letter to Walter Rothschild that would wind up becoming one of the most consequential letters in modern Middle Eastern history. If you’d read it at the time, you probably wouldn’t have envisioned the importance it would come to … Continue reading Today in Middle Eastern history: the Balfour Declaration (1917)
What happened to Kogalymavia Flight 9268? (UPDATED)
A Russian plane, Kogalymavia Flight 9268, carrying 224 people from Sharm el-Sheikh, the Egyptian Red Sea resort destination, to St. Petersburg, Russia, crashed in the Sinai on Saturday, killing everyone on board. ISIS immediately claimed responsibility, and several international air carriers quickly changed their routes to avoid Sinai airspace, but it's unlikely that ISIS shot this … Continue reading What happened to Kogalymavia Flight 9268? (UPDATED)
Today in Middle Eastern history: the last Ottoman Sultan is deposed (1922)
The removal of the last Ottoman sultan, Mehmed VI Vahideddin (d. 1926), is among history's greatest anti-climaxes. The Ottomans had (obviously) lost World War I, which resulted in the dismantling of their empire under the terms of their 1918 armistice and the 1920 Treaty of Sèvres. Sèvres not only put the empire's Arab dominions under … Continue reading Today in Middle Eastern history: the last Ottoman Sultan is deposed (1922)
Confounding expectations again
Well, it looks like today's Turkish snap poll was conclusive after all, and I should have listened harder to that nagging feeling I had yesterday that was telling me not to completely discount polling that showed Tayyip Erdoğan's AKP having regained enough support to put itself back in the majority. The preliminary results look like … Continue reading Confounding expectations again
Are you ready for some (more) inconclusive elections?
Tomorrow is the big day, when Turkey's voters will go out to the polls to most likely, uh, repeat what happened back in June, when nobody won a parliamentary majority. Brookings' Markaz blog runs through the four possible outcomes of tomorrow's vote: One of three scenarios is likely to emerge in the wake of the … Continue reading Are you ready for some (more) inconclusive elections?
You need to watch this investigation into the Rohingya genocide
Al Jazeera has put together a remarkable investigation into the Burmese government's complicity in the ongoing genocide of the Rohingya people in Myanmar's Rakhine State, a genocide that a report from the International State Crime Initiative at Queen Mary University of London says is entering its "final stages," with the Rohingya on the verge of … Continue reading You need to watch this investigation into the Rohingya genocide
On “true diversity”
Arthur C. Brooks, the head of the American Enterprise Institute, is worried that American universities are getting this whole "diversity" thing wrong: Scholarly studies have piled up showing that race and gender diversity in the workplace can increase creative thinking and improve performance. Meanwhile, excessive homogeneity can lead to stagnation and poor problem-solving. Unfortunately, new … Continue reading On “true diversity”
Today in European history: the Battle of Río Salado (1340)
Whoever came up with the term Reconquista to describe the Christian conquest of the Iberian Peninsula from Muslims deserves an all-time gold star for public relations work. I mean, there were parts of modern Spain that were in Muslim hands for well over seven hundred years, and if there's a statute of limitations on when something stops … Continue reading Today in European history: the Battle of Río Salado (1340)