Who says a two-state solution is dead?
It is now fashionable to say that "the two-state solution is dead." Why dead? How dead?

Turkey: Uprising’s currents run deep
Issues that fueled the May and June protests are hardly a laughing matter, and they are not about to quietly disappear.

Top general: Intervention in Syria would be costly, risky
U.S. options for military intervention in Syria would cost "billions" and require massive commitments of troops, plus planes, ships, submarines, and other equipment.

Egyptian Communists: Morsi ouster reflects popular will
July 6 interview with Salah Adli, the General Secretary of the Egyptian Communist Party.

Syria, poison gas, and Arabian tales
It is not unlike Sherlock Holmes and the dog that didn't bark. And like Holmes, start with the facts.

What will Iran’s new president deliver?
The election of Hassan Rouhani as president of Iran was welcomed by thousands coming onto the streets of Tehran and other Iranian cities.

U.S. intervention in Syria is a dangerous move
The Obama administration's announcement last week that it would start direct military aid to Syrian rebels is a dangerous step in the wrong direction.

Some 1.5 million disappear in Germany
Hard-hit Berlin, where 400,000 are unaccounted for, will now lose millions of euros in subsidies from the European Union and richer German states.

South Africa: Guptagate and the class nature of corruption
The so-called Guptagate scandal that has gripped South Africa over the past month has further exposed the scale of corruption dogging the ruling ANC. President Zuma was reportedly incandescent with rage.

Professor Falk stirs a firestorm
It doesn't take much to agitate the defenders of the official orthodoxy.

