What Do You MENA (Middle East, North Africa and other nearby Political Hotspots) 2019

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morsi's death after years in solitary confinement not receiving anywhere near adequate medical care will not be looked on kindly by historians

ogmor, Tuesday, 18 June 2019 15:25 (four years ago) link

a lot of ppl in the sudanese diaspora arranging protests, raising attention and trying to put international pressure on the transitional military council at what cld be a critical time. with the state controlling all of the media and lots of ppl in rural sudan relying heavily on the radio and an underfunded & vulnerable opposition movement, there seems to be a lot of pessimism and uncertainty over the plans for elections and concerns they'll end up with someone like sisi backed by the arab league and china, who are talking a lot about stability, and russia, who are also raising very legitimate concerns abt extremists

ogmor, Wednesday, 19 June 2019 11:26 (four years ago) link

Forget your Danish film critic's armchair speculations this is really good on the tanker episode:

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/jun/19/donald-trump-reckless-iran-policy-casts-doubt-us-global-leader

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 19 June 2019 11:38 (four years ago) link

Huge if true: Turkey ruling party set to lose Istanbul election

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-48739256

Uptown VONC (Le Bateau Ivre), Sunday, 23 June 2019 16:34 (four years ago) link

There was no way for them to win without fixing it and no way of fixing it without making it obvious so it was seen locally by a lot of people as a huge indicator of whether AKP would go fully down the route of squashing democracy when it doesn’t suit them. The question is whether they’ll try to invalidate the results but idk if that is likely to happen twice.

ShariVari, Sunday, 23 June 2019 16:39 (four years ago) link

The latter is obviously very much a question mark still. Even so, obvious fixing hasn't stopped the AKP before, so it is still somewhat surprising imo.

Uptown VONC (Le Bateau Ivre), Sunday, 23 June 2019 16:43 (four years ago) link

one month passes...

interview w/ matti friedman (who i like a lot tho i still need to read his latest book) on a topic that was v close to my mind when i started the first MENA thread - how israel is easier to understand in the context of the middle east than in the context of europe

https://www.timesofisrael.com/nobody-hijacked-israel-its-just-not-what-its-pioneers-thought-theyd-created/

relatedly (sorta) is how surprised i am whenever i see naive leftists suggesting that mizrahim might be partners w/ palestinians in challenging the israeli elite ashkenazi status quo - as if they don't realize that mizrahim are far more right-wing and "middle eastern" than ashkenazim and that utopian + peace focused politicians have always come from that so-called elite.

Mordy, Monday, 29 July 2019 18:35 (four years ago) link

he links to this article from 2015 that is related (but more about mizrachi music) and might also be interesting to ilxors/ilmers:
https://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/music/193162/israels-happiness-revolution

Mordy, Monday, 29 July 2019 18:50 (four years ago) link

interesting piece, he could spell out a bit more explicitly what values and opinions h"Middle-eastern-ness" is supposed to represent

Jeff Bathos (symsymsym), Tuesday, 30 July 2019 03:27 (four years ago) link

Is Catch-67 worth getting? Anybody checked it out yet?

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 30 July 2019 03:41 (four years ago) link

Seeing lots of quoted favorable reviews of Catch-67- The Left, the Right, and the Legacy of the Six Dy War by Micah Goodman, but I haven't read it and don't know anyone who has

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 30 July 2019 04:17 (four years ago) link

Wonder if its a response to Guy Laron's book, which makes the case for a months long premediation for a war of aggression.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 30 July 2019 19:48 (four years ago) link

ot sanpaku but have u seen this?

Political ideology predicts moral foundations, rather than the reverse, in panel data, suggesting that moral intuitions are not the root of political differences#SocSciResearchhttps://t.co/Ef5u72ybkV pic.twitter.com/lnIE1AtUp2

— Matt Grossmann (@MattGrossmann) July 30, 2019

i remember you were into personality explanations for political belief at one pt (not sure if you still are)

Mordy, Tuesday, 30 July 2019 20:02 (four years ago) link

Mordy, I'm still interested, but to me moral principles are orthogonal to more deeper seated psychology like the disgust response. This paper argues ideology -> morality. I'd argue the emotional brain -> either, which accords better with what we understand about individual psychology. Decisions are unconscious, the linguistic brain serves to rationalize them.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 30 July 2019 20:46 (four years ago) link

one month passes...

I get that endless war v Taliban hasn’t been successful so maybe peace treaty with Taliban if it can be reached will be better, but I still worry about Afghan women and others subject to fundamentalist Taliban who are still attacking weddings and such

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/09/taliban-attacks-afghan-city-talks-wrap-190901051603411.html

curmudgeon, Monday, 2 September 2019 17:15 (four years ago) link

The original casus belli for war in Afghanistan was to eliminate a safe haven for al Qaida. In the context of that war, liberating the women of Afghanistan was a peripheral strategy at most, aimed more at creating positive support among the US and NATO allies than anything else. In many ways, it strengthened the Taliban resistance to the government we helped to install and prop up. Abandoning the war was always going to mean abandoning the women of Afghanistan to their fate, because it was never about them. They were pawns. Which is sad, but war is a nearly useless instrument to create a more liberal society.

A is for (Aimless), Monday, 2 September 2019 18:45 (four years ago) link

war created a more liberal society after WW II in Germany and Japan and Italy; and sorta in South Korea after Korean war there, but yeah not too much success otherwise.

curmudgeon, Monday, 2 September 2019 19:14 (four years ago) link

Meanwhile in Iraq and Syria:

Five months after American-backed forces ousted the Islamic State from its last shard of territory in Syria, the terrorist group is gathering new strength, conducting guerrilla attacks across Iraq and Syria, retooling its financial networks and targeting new recruits at an allied-run tent camp, American and Iraqi military and intelligence officers said.

Though President Trump hailed a total defeat of the Islamic State this year, defense officials in the region see things differently, acknowledging that what remains of the terrorist group is here to stay...

....the terrorist group has still mobilized as many as 18,000 remaining fighters in Iraq and Syria. These sleeper cells and strike teams have carried out sniper attacks, ambushes, kidnappings and assassinations against security forces and community leaders...

... ISIS uses extortion to finance clandestine operations: Farmers in northern Iraq who refuse to pay have had their crops burned to the ground.

Over the past several months, ISIS has made inroads into a sprawling tent camp in northeast Syria, and there is no ready plan to deal with the 70,000 people there, including thousands of family members of ISIS fighters. American intelligence officials say the Al Hol camp, managed by Syrian Kurdish allies with little aid or security, is evolving into a hotbed of ISIS ideology and a huge breeding ground for future terrorists. The American-backed Syrian Kurdish force also holds more than 10,000 ISIS fighters, including 2,000 foreigners, in separate makeshift prisons....Defense officials in the region say the Islamic State is now entrenched in mostly rural territory, fighting in small elements of roughly a dozen fighters and taking advantage of the porous border between Iraq and Syria, along with the informal border between Iraqi Kurdistan and the rest of the country, where security forces are spread thin and responsibilities for public safety are sometimes disputed....

A particularly brutal episode of the kind not seen since the Islamic State was in control of territory in northern Iraq occurred in early August when armed men claiming ISIS allegiance held a public beheading of a policeman in a rural village south of the city of Samarra in Salahuddin Province, about two hours north of Baghdad.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/19/us/politics/isis-iraq-syria.html

curmudgeon, Monday, 2 September 2019 19:21 (four years ago) link

x-post-- I mean war helped create , along with all the subsequent peace-related stuff establishing rule of law again, helping the economy etc.

curmudgeon, Monday, 2 September 2019 19:23 (four years ago) link

Eh, it took a while in Korea ;) Like, forty years or so.

Nobody really condemns the invasion of Afghanistan, because sheltering Osama bin Laden while he planned 9/11 was a really really really bad idea, but the way that war just got... ignored... until it just became the usual stalemate / quagmire, is one of those just stupid things the US has done. No, war is bad for bringing democracy, but imagine all the money wasted on the Iraq war had been spent on a Marshall plan for Afghanistan.

Frederik B, Monday, 2 September 2019 21:11 (four years ago) link

It didn't get ignored. Hundreds of billions spent, and thousands of lives (incl 43 Danes) lost. Tens of billions on development, perhaps more per capita than any other spot on the planet (incl during the Marshall Plan), though overwhelmingly spent on Western contractors rather than indigenous engineers/labor.

The problem seems to be that the 1) cultural issues of the "graveyard of empires" will take many decades to resolve; 2) from 2001, the US and NATO backed warlords and some of the most corrupt in Afghan society; 3) progress won't happen so long as Pakistan's ISI has more interest leveraging fundamentalism to play geopolitical games than supporting peace; and 4) Western democracies now lack the ideological conviction that made the endless sacrifices of colonialism possible (for better or worse).

Neither military force or money would be sufficient for these problems. Cultivating non-corrupt indigenous pro-development strongmen, getting Pakistan and other regional powers to sign on, and committing to the project for 40+ years (and accepting a constant dribble of losses) were prerequisites. Western democracies just haven't been very good at "nation building" since the early 20th century, and Afghanistan lacked the sort of political center of gravity that nationalist strongmen like Chiang Ching-kuo (Taiwan), Park Chung-hee (S Korea), or Lee Kuan Yew (Singapore) provided.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Monday, 2 September 2019 23:18 (four years ago) link

Western democracies just haven't been very good at "nation building" since the early 20th century

This 'since' in this sentence might turn it into the wrongest historical statement of all time

Frederik B, Tuesday, 3 September 2019 08:05 (four years ago) link

My wife has been working in Afghanistan specifically to empower the women over there - made some good friends - so I’m really hoping we don’t walk away without some path forward for them

Heez, Tuesday, 3 September 2019 11:00 (four years ago) link

Lots of newly independent nations in the 50s and 60s only could become "nations" thanks to transport/communications infrastructure and governmental frameworks left by colonial powers. Not saying colonialism was moral or justified, just that the colonial inheritance made states larger than small provinces governable. The historical anomaly becomes just how ineffectual externally driven state building exercises have been in the post-colonial era.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 3 September 2019 17:44 (four years ago) link

the colonial inheritance made states larger than small provinces governable.

If, by "governable" you indicate only that a central government can largely extend its effective monopoly of force within its own borders, then I agree. But almost every sizeable ex-colonial "nation" has no organically developed national identity and has many large groups of "citizens" who are disaffected, disenfranchised and held down though brutal military and police power. Such "governance" is really not much different from or better than the Taliban.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 3 September 2019 18:17 (four years ago) link

it feels like you're overlooking the way the national boundaries were deliberately structured to cross/disrupt tribal boundaries and enhance existing divisions. kind of made the whole exercise a moot point.

sleeve, Tuesday, 3 September 2019 20:04 (four years ago) link

granted, that was more pronounced in Africa, but this is the MENA thread

sleeve, Tuesday, 3 September 2019 20:05 (four years ago) link

https://edition.cnn.com/2019/09/03/middleeast/yemen-war-crimes-un-panel-intl/index.html

UN panel says UK, France, US & Iran may be complicit in war crimes in Yemen

ogmor, Tuesday, 3 September 2019 21:34 (four years ago) link

every sizeable ex-colonial "nation" has no organically developed national identity and has many large groups of "citizens" who are disaffected, disenfranchised and held down

Pretty much the experience of Western Europe, for 2 to 6 centuries prior to national unification. We shouldn't be surprised if humans in the developing world behave much like humans in developing Europe. Nations require a lot of suppression of competing feudal and tribal interests.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 3 September 2019 22:41 (four years ago) link

XP sleeve: Personally, I wouldn't have managed independence as the Europeans did. I would have defined the smallest feasible voting districts with respect to natural geographic borders, called for elections to transition governments, and then partition based on the electoral results, so each ethnic/religious/political minority that had any local majorities would have its own state. The Balkan model. There would be a natural Fulani nation stretching from Mali to Sudan. The Pakistan/India border would be a mess, but so were the demographics.

This is totally relevant to the current situation in MENA, particularly in Iraq, Syria and Palestine. The post-colonial nations don't reflect underlying demographics, and they've suffered as a result.

Above, I'm just saying the success of post-colonial states in independence has had a lot to do with how well colonial nations provided infrastructure and transfered models of governance. I don't think its a coincidence that some of the modern nations with the poorest outcomes had the misfortune of being ruled by competing European powers in succession, or by fascist Italy.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 3 September 2019 22:58 (four years ago) link

Pretty much the experience of Western Europe, for 2 to 6 centuries prior to national unification.

True up to a point, but in Europe national entities evolved and amalgamated purely based upon local European interests, through shifting alliances, local conquests, assimilation and integration, or violent rejection and expulsion. It was an organic, self-generating process. Europe did this to itself.

The ex-colonial nations had their present borders imposed purely by external western interests and those western interests still exert pressure upon them to maintain those borders and to conform their policies to western needs and desires. Thus, we are heavily implicated in the brutality and violent repressions exercised there.

A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 4 September 2019 00:59 (four years ago) link

This is extraordinary even by the US’ standards:

Having failed at piracy, the US resorts to outright blackmail—deliver us Iran’s oil and receive several million dollars or be sanctioned yourself.

Sounds very similar to the Oval Office invitation I received a few weeks back.

It is becoming a pattern.#BTeamGangsters pic.twitter.com/B1oQTLghWZ

— Javad Zarif (@JZarif) September 4, 2019

Having failed in the attempt to get the EU to apply sanctions they’re not party to wrt Iranian oil tankers, captains are apparently being offered bribes to pilot ships into jurisdictions that will.

ShariVari, Wednesday, 4 September 2019 16:50 (four years ago) link

^ Those tactics would only be justified between nations actively at war. Basically, they are acts of war.

A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 4 September 2019 17:07 (four years ago) link

70% of Iranian oil goes to China, Japan, India, S.Korea, and Turkey. I wonder which nation(s) on the Hormuz/S. China route are so beholden to US/Saudi Arabia they'd play along. Maybe Indonesia?

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 4 September 2019 20:48 (four years ago) link

Worth keeping an eye on Abqaiq, largest oil processing plant in the world, responsible for 6.8 Mbpd of production, and attacked in 2008 by Al Qaeda.

Multiple fires (now under control), reports of gunfire. If I wanted to undermine the Saudi state (from within or without), this facility would be my target.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZP3OTW9K-y0

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Saturday, 14 September 2019 05:23 (four years ago) link

Houthi drone use is interesting. Low tech having decent enough results.

Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Saturday, 14 September 2019 08:27 (four years ago) link

Worrying prospects obviously in many respects, while SA deserve everything sent at them imo

Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Saturday, 14 September 2019 08:28 (four years ago) link

BBC

The Houthi spokesman, Yahya Sarea, told al-Masirah TV, which is owned by the Houthi movement and is based in Beirut, that further attacks could be expected in the future.

He said Saturday's attack was one of the biggest operations the Houthi forces had undertaken inside Saudi Arabia and was carried out in "co-operation with the honourable people inside the kingdom".

Houthi collaborating with the Sh'ia of Qatif. Driving cargo trucks with Qasef-1 (or better) drones to within 150 km (and probably a lot less) of Abqaiq.

Saudi Arabia is going to finish demolishing Al-Awamiyah with artillery. And if you thought it was a police state before...

I'll be keeping my tanks topped off.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Saturday, 14 September 2019 17:43 (four years ago) link

Who didn't think Saudi Arabia was a police state?

Frederik B, Saturday, 14 September 2019 19:50 (four years ago) link

He is not implying that anyone didn't think that.

Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Saturday, 14 September 2019 19:52 (four years ago) link

No streetview on Buqaiq/Abqaiq, but the video appears to come from the rooftop of the Hardee's on the west side of King Abdulaziz Rd from the compound. It's remarkable looking at satelite maps how easy it would be to target the critical elements like the ones around 25°55'54.8 N 49°40'43.3 E.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Saturday, 14 September 2019 20:44 (four years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Erdogan has vowed to create a buffer zone inside Syria by pushing back Kurdish militants and settling Syrian refugees in the country’s north. Turkey suspects that the U.S. is backing Kurdish aspirations for self-rule in Syria and is prepared to use military force to prevent what it perceives as an attempt to redraw the region’s map.

curmudgeon, Sunday, 6 October 2019 05:02 (four years ago) link

Erdogan has vowed to create a buffer zone inside Syria by pushing back Kurdish militants and settling Syrian refugees in the country’s north. Turkey suspects that the U.S. is backing Kurdish aspirations for self-rule in Syria and is prepared to use military force to prevent what it perceives as an attempt to redraw the region’s map.

curmudgeon, Sunday, 6 October 2019 05:03 (four years ago) link

Erdogan has vowed to create a buffer zone inside Syria by pushing back Kurdish militants and settling Syrian refugees in the country’s north. Turkey suspects that the U.S. is backing Kurdish aspirations for self-rule in Syria and is prepared to use military force to prevent what it perceives as an attempt to redraw the region’s map.

curmudgeon, Sunday, 6 October 2019 05:03 (four years ago) link

oops

curmudgeon, Sunday, 6 October 2019 15:29 (four years ago) link

The old Kurdish proverb comes to mind again: 'No friends but the mountains'. This time it's Trump's turn to fuck up the Kurds once again. Never mind they did the dirty work in defeating IS. This is giving nothing less than giving complete carte blanche to one of the worst dictators around, Erdogan, to kill thousands of Kurds. Appalling.

Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 7 October 2019 10:18 (four years ago) link

:(

I don't know what to say, it's just tragic.

pomenitul, Monday, 7 October 2019 10:19 (four years ago) link

Tragic but predictable.

Let them eat Pfifferlinge an Schneckensauce (Tom D.), Monday, 7 October 2019 10:26 (four years ago) link


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