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Afghanistan: “A New Way Forward” (Afghanistan Study Group)
A group of US analysts and former Government officials have written a lengthy re-evaluation of American strategy in Afghanistan, in the context of their assertion about the current position that “prospects for success are dim”. “A New Way Forward“, in striking contrast to the military-first approach of the Obama Administration, claim... Read more
BY PROF. SCOTT LUCAS | Eyl-2010

A win-win solution for Kosovo is possible
What follows is an interview I gave Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty on 1 September 2010 on the current situation in and around Kosovo in the run-up to the UN General Assembly Session starting on 14 September 2010. There has been a flurry of diplomatic activity surrounding the issue of Kosovo, ahead of the UN General Assembly session this m... Read more
BY PROF. STEFAN WOLFF | Eyl-2010

China Puts Mark on Eurasia Energy Picture
According to the International Energy Agency, China has outpaced the United States and become the world's largest energy consumer. The country's robust growth is fueled by energy-intensive heavy industry and infrastructure development and consumes a lot of steel, cement and aluminum, according to Christina Lin, a visiting fellow at the Washington I... Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Eyl-2010

No End for US War of Words against Iran
The mainstream media around the world are enthusiastically adding flavor to the spicy food of "attacking Iran" which they've cooked for us. War threats are being renewed against Iran once more and overconfident politicians are trying their chance to see if they can release some believable predictions this time. When Scott Ritter, the former chief ... Read more
BY KOUROSH ZIABARI | Eyl-2010

An Amazing Look Into the Past
Although this is a bit outside what I usually discuss (but I have an excuse coming up in a moment), I recommend to you some truly remarkable pictures of the Russian empire, taken a century ago. Here's my excuse: A number of them are in the Caucasus and Central Asia which can be regarded as part of the Greater Middle East. I hate it ... Read more
BY PROF. BARRY RUBIN | Ağu-2010

"What Soviet Threat?" What If Attlee's Radicalism Had Prevailed?
Although British Prime Minister, Clement Attlee (1945-51), is properly known as a Cold Warrior no less gung-ho than his Foreign Secretary, Ernest Bevin, or the American president, Harry Truman, less well known is Attlee's rejection of the salience of the Soviet 'threat' and promotion of a policy of closing British bases in the Mediterranean and Mid... Read more
BY PROF. INDERJEET PARMAR | Ağu-2010

Hair Today, Prime Minister Tomorrow
Over the past two decades a streak of hair between the nose and upper lip has gone from a sign of manhood to a class symbol. Until the early 1990s, almost all Turkish men had one, whereas today the moustache belongs to those only in the lower-middle and working-class neighbourhoods known as varos. These concrete-heavy boroughs unattractively encirc... Read more
BY DR. SONER ÇAĞAPTAY | Ağu-2010

Indigneous Party Prospects in Peru
The decision by Peru's indigenous communities to form a political party ahead of next year's presidential election poses a number of questions. These include the prospects of such a party in Peru specifically and the relationship between social movements and political parties more generally. The immediate reasons for the decision ar... Read more
BY DR. GUY BURTON | Ağu-2010

Why All Middle Eastern Politics Can't Be Reduced Merely to the Arab-Israeli Conflict
ly cannot comprehend why so many in the West refuse to see that Arabs can be revolutionaries. It is remarkable that so many who claim to be experts don't incorporate the idea that Arabs, like other peoples, might dislike their existing societies or be motivated by ideologies claiming to be the blueprints for utopias. After all, if Af... Read more
BY PROF. BARRY RUBIN | Ağu-2010

Afghan Intel War Leaks And After
WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange - an Australian journalist and a computer hacker, has begun to draw intense fire over his leaks of Intel files related to Afghan war from the Amnesty International, Human Rights Commission (AIHRC), Obama administration and the US military. Julian is pledging to continue with his crusade against censorship ... Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Ağu-2010
GÜNDEM
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China Economy Weekly: Rail Projects, Inflation, International Trade Links
China Clears Inter-city Rail Projects: The National Development and Reform Commission on Friday approved inter-city rail transit networks covering more than 2,000 kilometres to accelerate regional integration. The network runs a... Read more
BY PROF. SCOTT LUCAS | Ağu-2010
Clement Attlee, David Cameron and the Special Relationship With India
British Prime Minister David Cameron recently declared his wish to build – or rather renew – Britain's 'special relationship' with India. The likelihood of that, I suspect, is strong mainly because of the character of India's elite, and the evolution... Read more
BY PROF. INDERJEET PARMAR | Ağu-2010
The US in Costa Rica: the price of Latin American exceptionalism?
During the current Venezuela-Colombia spat, one particular comment by the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chavez, was particularly striking – although not necessarily for the reason he gave. During a speech commemorating Venezuela's founder and his politi... Read more
BY DR. GUY BURTON | Ağu-2010
Iran Document: Mousavi on "Constitutional Monarchy" Movement
We are marking the anniversary of the "Constitutional Monarchy" movement that has echoed the necessity to condition power for more than a hundred years. Aside from demands for justice, freedom, and establishment of law, the placing of ... Read more
BY PROF. SCOTT LUCAS | Ağu-2010
Viewpoint: Throwing the Afghan Baby Out With Bath Water
There have been doubts in the US and Europe about the war in Afghanistan and clamour for an even earlier withdrawal of international troops since the website Wikileaks released 90,000 leaked classified documents on the conflict. In an extraordinary ... Read more
BY AHMED RASHID | Ağu-2010
Divide Afghanistan at Your Peril
Over the past 32 years, Afghans have fought a series of wars to keep their country together. For all the machinations of great powers and neighbouring states, no Afghan warlord or leader has ever succumbed to outside pressure for partition. ... Read more
BY AHMED RASHID | Ağu-2010
'Made in America' is not the way out of this crisis
President Barack Obama, addressing car workers recently at a GM plant in Michigan, defended his administration's motor industry bail-out, saying that it had rescued "the heart and soul" of American manufacturing, that "has been a symbol of our econom... Read more
BY JAGDISH BHAGWATI | Ağu-2010
Anglo-American Relations: The Special Relationship Marches On
Even as British leaders, and the media, proclaim the imminent death of the 'special relationship' with the United States, they cannot seem to help backing America's line in world affairs. Last week, when Prime Minister David Cameron was in Turkey, he... Read more
BY PROF. INDERJEET PARMAR | Ağu-2010
How Conspiracy Theories Spread
How and why do conspiracy theories spread in Turkey? Recent developments are a case in point, demonstrating the role of government rhetoric in spreading such theories, as well as anti-Western sentiments. Lately, Turkey has experienced a spike in Kur... Read more
BY DR. SONER ÇAĞAPTAY | Ağu-2010
Presidents and Their Generals: A Conversation with Eliot Cohen
AI: Let's start with the Stanley McChrystal episode. What's your take on this? Why did the general act with such inexplicable tactlessness? Did President Obama, in your view, respond appropriately? Eliot Cohen: Obama handled it well... Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Ağu-2010
Can You Handle The Truth?: Poll Shows The Shocking Reality of Arab Public Opinion
This is one of those stories about the Middle East that is totally amazing but not the least bit surprising. What, you ask, do I mean? From the standpoint of the way the region is portrayed in the West this information is incredible but if you unders... Read more
BY PROF. BARRY RUBIN | Ağu-2010
Children of a Lesser God
How easily are such sentiments expressed. Tens of thousands of Afghans have been killed in the past decade of the 'war on terror', waged in pursuit of Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda. So what are a few thousand more? They're just Afghans, after all, and... Read more
BY PROF. INDERJEET PARMAR | Ağu-2010
Turkey's New Foreign Policy Direction: Implications for U.S.-Turkish Relations
Chairman Berman, Ranking Member Ros-Lehtinen, Honorable Members. Thank you for this opportunity to testify. Prime Minister Erdoğan, and the Justice and Development Party (AKP) have changed Turkey fundamentally. They do not simply seek good relatio... Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Tem-2010
Statement of Dr. Ian Lesser
Mr. Chairman, distinguished members of the committee, thank you for inviting me to share my views on Turkey's evolving foreign policy and the implications for American interests and strategy. With your permission, I will offer a brief summa... Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Tem-2010
Turkey and the United States: How To Go Forward (and Not Back)
Mr. Chairman, thank you very much for the honor of being invited to speak at this hearing on Turkey and U.S. Turkish relations. Turkey is a fascinating, sometimes frustrating, often confusing and very important country in a key part of the world f... Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Tem-2010
Statement of Soner Cagaptay, Ph.D.
Hearing on "Turkey's New Foreign Policy Direction: Implications for U.S.-Turkish Relations" Thank you, Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, for inviting me to this timely and important hearing on Turkey at this crucial juncture in U.S... Read more
BY DR. SONER ÇAĞAPTAY | Tem-2010
Chairman Berman's opening statement at hearing, "Turkey's New Foreign Policy Direction: Implications
The purpose of this hearing is to gain insight into the changes in the foreign-policy direction of our long-time ally Turkey. Now the sixteenth-largest economy in the world, Turkey is a complex country, endowed by geography with circumstances that co... Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Tem-2010
A Puzzling Scenario? UNITAS Exercises in Peru
Last weekend the UNITAS naval exercises between the US and several South American navies, including 1300 from Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay, and soldiers from Canada, came to an end. This regional event is d... Read more
BY DR. GUY BURTON | Tem-2010
The Electrical Workers Union versus President Calderon: Class, Struggle, Repression and the Rise of
There is a direct relation between the rise of criminal gangs, the deepening of neo-liberalism and the repression of social movements and trade unions. Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Tem-2010
Extracting Change in Afghanistan's Development Quagmire
The girls' high school under construction in Jabal Seraj could have turned out like any other development project in the area: crumbling and dangerous. Afghanistan is littered with poor-quality buildings sponsored by foreign donors. The projects are ... Read more
BY CESRAN-SARAM | Tem-2010
A new low for Colombian-Venezuelan relations?
Relations between Colombia and Venezuela appear to have hit a new low. Diplomatic relations between the two countries were severed by Venezuela's government following the Colombia ambassador's presentation before the OAS last Thursday (22 July) that ... Read more
BY DR. GUY BURTON | Tem-2010
Iran Analysis: The Hardliners Take on Ahmadinejad
The dominant front-line story on EA from Iran these days is the tension within the establishment: the growing conservative/principlist movement against the Government, the fight over Islamic Azad University, the disputes over the budget and the (stil... Read more
BY PROF. SCOTT LUCAS | Tem-2010
Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice on Kosovo
Does the Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice on Kosovo’s Declaration of Independence Resolve Anything? I always tell my students that, when sitting an exam, they have to answer the question that has been set rather than one that t... Read more
BY PROF. STEFAN WOLFF | Tem-2010
What to Expect from the ICJ Advisory Opinion on Kosovo
More than two years ago, in February 2008, the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government of Kosovo unilaterally declared Kosovo's independence from Serbia. This was the culmination of an almost ten-year process of contested international administra... Read more
BY PROF. STEFAN WOLFF | Tem-2010
KİTAP ANALİZ
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ANKET
Do you think that the Greek unrest could spread to Europe’s other debt-ridden economies?
Total votes: 123
ÖNERİLEN LİNKLER
CONTENTS
UZMANLAR
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PROF. BÜLENT GÖKAY
Let's not Forget History's Lessons
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PROF. SCOTT LUCAS
Afghanistan: “A New Way Forward” (Afghanistan Study Group)
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PROF. ALP ÖZERDEM
Cameroon’s Golden Anniversary of Independence: Anything to Celebrate?*
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PROF. STEFAN WOLFF
A win-win solution for Kosovo is possible
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AHMED RASHID
Viewpoint: Throwing the Afghan Baby Out With Bath Water
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PROF. BARRY RUBIN
An Amazing Look Into the Past
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ASSOC. PROF. BAYRAM GÜNGÖR
Is GUAM Really Only an “Organisation for Democracy and Economic Development" in The Black Sea Region?*
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ASSOC. PROF. IBRAHIM SIRKECI
For a Pro-Immigration Argument
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DR. AYLA GÖL
The Fear of a Free Kurdistan in the Middle East of the 21st Century
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DR. SONER ÇAĞAPTAY
Hair Today, Prime Minister Tomorrow
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DR. KURTULUS GEMICI
Taming Rating Agencies
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ÜYE GİRİŞİ
ZİYARETÇİ SAYILARI






![]() | Bugün | 117 |
![]() | Dün | 127 |
![]() | Bu hafta | 369 |
![]() | Bu ay | 1028 |
![]() | Toplam | 88246 |
INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
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Afghanistan's Mineral Wealth: A Blessing in Disgui
Ever since the Pentagon announced that it estimated Afghanistan to sit on around $1 trillion of minerals, including iron ore, copper, cobalt, gold, silver and aluminium, and additional reserves of lit... Read more
By PROF. STEFAN WOLFF | 27 Tem 2010
Only talks with the Taliban can end an unwinnable
The meeting, attended by Foreign Secretary William Hague, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other foreign ministers, along with the UN Secretary General, is a make-or-break effort to galvanise... Read more
By AHMED RASHID | 26 Tem 2010
"Time Tested Friendship": Azerbaijan–Georgian Rela
"After the August war" - most political analysts use this quote when discussing events after the Georgian-Russian war in 2008, which changed the political map of the wider Caucasus. The war also serv... Read more
By ZAUR SHIRIYEV | 26 Tem 2010
Democracy and Judaism in Israel
Israel was established as both a democratic and a Jewish state. Both qualities continue to be real enough. But there have been increasing tensions between these two definitions of the state, and some ... Read more
By PETER BERGER | 25 Tem 2010
Posting From Pakistan
During the next two weeks I'll be visiting Pakistan at the invitation of the US Embassy there. I won't be there to toe the government line; from time to time US diplomats abroad call on people from m... Read more
By WALTER RUSSELL MEAD | 25 Tem 2010
The AKP's Hamas Policy III: Countering Radicalizat
For Turks today, after seven years of propaganda, Hamas appears to be a good organization as it has been a guest in Istanbul seven times and has had multiple contacts with the government. It even has ... Read more
By DR. SONER ÇAĞAPTAY | 25 Tem 2010
The AKP's Hamas Policy II: "Us vs. Them"
At home, the Justice and Development Party, or AKP, has promoted the Islamist mindset of "us Muslims" in conflict with "the bad others" through the media and also by spreading Hamas' views throughout ... Read more
By DR. SONER ÇAĞAPTAY | 25 Tem 2010
The AKP's Hamas Policy I: How Turkey Turned
Turkey has not traditionally boasted strong popular support for Hamas, or any other groups with a violent Islamist agenda. Turks generally have had an attitude of benign indifference towards their c... Read more
By DR. SONER ÇAĞAPTAY | 25 Tem 2010
No, Israel is about to Attack Iran Now, Here's Why
How do you know someone has no idea what they're talking about? Answer: They predict that Israel is about to attack Iran. From the perspective of people in Israel who are closely following these issu... Read more
By PROF. BARRY RUBIN | 25 Tem 2010
Why Peace Can Be As Difficult As War?
Current public policy debates in Armenia and Azerbaijan over a possible Nagorno-Karabakh war are more acceptable to those who want to return to their homes rather than live in a “no-war-no-peace” situ... Read more
By ZAUR SHIRIYEV | 17 Tem 2010
Nuking Westphalia: Obama’s Deep Convictions Point
In spite of what some conspiracy-minded critics on the right think, mainstream journalists like Time’s Joel Klein do not often agree with Fidel Castro. That both Klein and Castro ... Read more
By WALTER RUSSELL MEAD | 17 Tem 2010
The Silent Palestinian Refugee Crisis
In 2007, the jihadi group Fatah al-Islam infiltrated the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr al-Bared in north Lebanon, engaging the Lebanese army in a protracted three-month battle. The violence resulte... Read more
By CESRAN-SARAM | 17 Tem 2010
Orthodox Patriarchate in Turkey Wins One Battle, S
On the picturesque island of Buyukada in the Marmara Sea about an hour’s ferry ride from Istanbul, tourists climb a steep track through pine trees to peer through locked gates at the decaying remains ... Read more
By CESRAN-SARAM | 17 Tem 2010
Let's not Forget History's Lessons
Reply to Dr. Cagaptay's Article (Turkey Lost Turkey) “When Ataturk established the CHP in the 1920s, his vision was to make Turkey European”[1]. Yes it was a truly commendable achieveme... Read more
By PROF. BÜLENT GÖKAY | 14 Tem 2010





































