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261 - 270 from 772 . In "Opinion / Editorial"
Putin plays hardball, again
Vladimir Putin is surely enjoying waiting to see what further retaliation the United States and its allies plan after his latest defiance of international law. Russia’s seizure of three Ukrainian naval vessels seeking to enter the Sea of Azov to reach Ukrainian ports is clearly a deliberately thrown-down gauntlet.The timing is surely significant. On Friday, Putin will be with the world’s other leading heads of state at the G20 meeting in Argentina. President Trump and the Europeans have the option of berating the Russian leader in public. This might provide Putin with the excuse to stage a walk out, thus ratcheting up current tensions a further notch or two. Alternatively, tough talking with the Russian president may take place on the sidelines of the G20.The Moscow line on this latest...
November 28, 2018

Putin plays hardball, again

Short-lived smiles in Brussels?
The weekend was clearly a good one for the European Union. British Prime Minister Theresa May inked a Brexit deal which the European Commission is privately celebrating as humiliating for the UK. Moreover, at the EU summit where May put her name to an agreement that is highly controversial back home, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte indicated that his government was prepared to back away from confrontation with Brussels over its planned high-spending budget.Conte had had a meeting with EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker before he suggested that his administration would look again at the budget which envisaged a deficit of 2.4 percent of GDP. Brussels had ordered Rome to redo the budget because of Italy’s high debt burden, which is 132 percent of GDP. The Commission ruled...
November 27, 2018

Short-lived smiles in Brussels?

Paris, Act Two
It was only a couple of weeks ago that French President Emmanuel Macron was joined by 70 world leaders at the Champs-Élysées to commemorate the centenary of the end of World War I. But these days those same leaders would not want to be anywhere near this most iconic of streets where police have been battling protesters for what could be prolonged chaos.The protest was initially sparked by rises in fuel taxes, but since it is not uncommon for a protest to originally target one problem but then morph into a wider demonstration, this, too, has turned into a more general expression of grievances against Macron, who is seen as out of touch with the daily concerns of ordinary French people outside the capital. So, to the capital thousands decided to take their grievances, traveling from across...
November 26, 2018

Paris, Act Two

Muslim women in the US Congress
Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib were not elected to serve in the US Congress because they are Muslims but even before January’s swearing-in ceremony, their political leanings, which are claimed to emanate from their Islamic faith, are already in the spotlight.Reportedly, the first two Muslim women ever in Congress deceived voters about their positions on Israel. It is claimed that both women, at some point during their rise in electoral politics, led voters — especially Jewish voters — to believe that they held moderate views on Israel. After being elected, both women supposedly reversed their positions.These reports are false. From day one to the day of the elections on Nov. 6, Omar of Minnesota and Tlaib of Michigan never changed course. They have always supported the anti-Israel...
November 25, 2018

Muslim women in the US Congress

Airbnb’s refusal to handle stolen property
THE decision by the online letting agency Airbnb to stop listing properties in illegally-built Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem is being widely welcomed. However, it must be wondered why this hugely successful international online operation ever thought in the first place that it was acceptable to hire out settler homes. As with social media companies such as Facebook and Twitter it clearly seemed enough for the founders of these organizations to develop a compelling business idea and code up a highly user-friendly online interface, then sit back and rake in the money. Airbnb along with cab-hailing service Uber and its imitators, has gloried in its disruption of established markets. In doing so it has come up against local regulators intent on trying to protect...
November 23, 2018

Airbnb’s refusal to handle stolen property

Pointless Interpol wrangling
There is something distinctly odd about the row that has broken out over the appointment of a new head of Interpol, the international clearing agency for police intelligence and arrest warrants.A South Korean, Kim Jong-yang, has just been chosen by a majority of Interpol’s 194 member states meeting in Dubai for their annual conference. The Russians have called “foul”, insisting that their candidate, Alexander Prokopchuk, who had initially appeared to be the favorite, was undermined by a concerted US-led lobbying effort to block his election.And, indeed, there were Western claims that Prokopchuk, a retired general and senior member of the Russian interior ministry, had abused Interpol’s international arrest warrant system to try and detain overseas critics of Kremlin policies. One...
November 22, 2018

Pointless Interpol wrangling

A Spaniard in the works?
Cancelling the UK’s membership in the European Union has proved far more difficult than was expected by the majority of Britons who voted for Brexit in June 2016. The then-new Prime Minister Theresa May added what could prove to be a catastrophic complication by calling a snap election a year later. Designed to consolidate her Conservative Party’s hold on power, it actually saw her lose her absolute majority and be forced into coalition with Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionists.The 27 member states who will remain have not made the UK’s departure negotiations in the least bit easy. The EU commission in Brussels understandably takes the view that London must be penalized for quitting. This does not simply involve a bill of around $65 billion ostensibly to honor financial...
November 21, 2018

A Spaniard in the works?

Ebola’s terrorist allies
Ebola is a terrifying disease. And until now, the terror it inspires has been its greatest ally. In their attempt to escape an outbreak, people already infected carry the contagion to fresh areas. This proved to be an important reason for Ebola’s spread in West Africa where, in the three years from 2013, some 11,300 people died.But now with a fresh outbreak in the northeastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), this appalling disease, which on average proves fatal to half of those infected, has acquired a new ally - terrorists.Thugs from a group calling themselves the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) have assaulted UN peacekeepers and health professionals struggling with the latest outbreak at its epicenter in the city of Beni, population of around a million, in the DRC’s...
November 20, 2018

Ebola’s terrorist allies

California burning
The US state of California has the world’s fifth largest economy, but going by the way it has handled the wildfires that have been raging for the past 11 days, money isn’t everything.To date, the fires have killed at least 76 people and more than 1,200 people are reported to be missing. More than 247,000 acres have been burned since Nov. 8 when the blaze began, 13,500 structures destroyed and the air quality in northern California has been rated the world’s worst, even worse than in India and China. It is the deadliest US wildfire in a century and many people, not least of whom is President Donald Trump, are wondering why this is happening at all.Leaving for California to survey the destruction, Trump again focused on forest management as a cause of the blazes. In a couple of tweets,...
November 19, 2018

California burning

Netanyahu on the chopping block
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expressing hope that come Sunday he won’t need to call for early elections. He will instead reportedly try to stabilize his government on that day, at the weekly cabinet meeting. However, it is almost impossible for the coalition to function with only a one-seat majority, which it was left with after Avigdor Lieberman resigned as defense minister.Lieberman’s withdrawal of his right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu Party from the prime minister’s ruling coalition left Netanyahu with a bare minimum 61-seat coalition, not enough seats to topple the government on his own, but enough to allow other parties to make demands of the Israeli leader. On cue entered right-wing Education Minister Naftali Bennett, leader of the right-wing Jewish Home Party,...
November 18, 2018

Netanyahu on the chopping block

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