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In-Depth Coverage

Original Commentaries

11/20/08
Pakistan: Learning the Right Lessons from Iraq  —Senator Robert P. Casey, Jr. (D-PA), Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Original Commentary for Middle East Bulletin.
11/13/08
The View from Gaza  —Taghreed El-Khodary, New York Times journalist in Gaza and Harvard University Nieman Fellow (2005-2006). Interviewed by Middle East Bulletin.
11/04/08
Getting on the Right Track  —Dalia Rabin, chairperson, Rabin Center, and daughter of the late Yitzhak Rabin. Interview with Middle East Bulletin.

Setting the Record Straight

Keeping Focus on Long-Term Objectives

“[W]hile we do need to have a cooperative approach that involves many of our friends and allies in meeting with the Pakistanis, … as we work out with them a rough division of labor, the U.S., I believe, ought to be taking the lead in addressing the issues in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. And given the difficulty of doing so, I suspect that we will not have a great deal of difficulty in convincing them to allow us to take the lead there. But as we all know, there is a real tension between our short-term tactical aims in trying to capture or kill terrorists across the border and militants in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and our longer- term counterinsurgency pacification goals. We very much need to be focusing on the end state. What is it that we want this area to look like? ... In that context we need to have a common agenda with the Pakistani government and very much to include the military on counterinsurgency in that area. There needs to be, therefore, a focus on combining military efforts with economic, development and political development in those areas.”
—Robert L. Grenier, managing director and chairman for Global Security Consulting, Kroll, event, “Partnership for Progress: Advancing a New Strategy for Prosperity and Stability in Pakistan and the Region,” Center for American Progress, November 17, 2008

Middle East Analysis

July 8, 2008
“Given so long a list [of Middle East conflicts], it is obvious that conflict involving Israel is not the longest, or the bloodiest, or the most widespread of the region’s conflicts. … they are independent symptoms; one conflict does not cause another, and its 'resolution' cannot resolve another. … So … why is the idea of 'linkage' so persistent in some quarters?”
--Martin Kramer, Olin Institute Senior Fellow, Harvard University, Wexler- Fromer Fellow, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Middle East Strategy at Harvard (MESH), June 12, 2008
  • "[A]ll key issues in the Middle East—the Arab- Israeli conflict, Iraq, Iran, the need for political and economic reforms, and extremism and terrorism— are inextricably linked. … The United States will not be able to achieve its goals in the Middle East unless United States deals directly with the Arab-Israeli conflict.”
    --The Iraq Study Group Report, James A. Baker and Lee H. Hamilton, co-chairs, published December 6, 2006