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From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
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Subject: January 10 update
10 January, 2012
Article 1.
New York Times
Shimon Peres on Obama, Iran and the Path to
Peace
Ronen Bergman
Article 2.
The Economist
Jack Lew: A new name on the dollar
Article 3.
The Council on Foreign Relations
The Middle East in 2013: Don't Count on It
Steven A. Cook
Al-Monitor
Iran Top Backer of Palestinian Islamic Jihad
Abeer Ayyoub
Article 5.
Project Syndicate
The World in 2030
Joseph S. Nye
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Article 6.
Foreign Affairs
World Politics After the Boom in Unconventional
Energy
Aviezer Tucker
Article 7.
Washington Post
The robots are coming
Matt Miller
Article I
New York Times
Shimon Peres on Obama, Iran and the
Path to Peace
Ronen Bergman
January 9, 2013 -- "This part of the conversation is highly
sensitive," said the spokeswoman for Israel's president. "I want
all cellphones taken out of the room." It was July 25, 2012, and I
was interviewing Shimon Peres in a wood-paneled suite at the
King David I-Iotel in Jerusalem. I handed my phone to one of the
guards standing at the door, and Peres swiftly opened a scathing
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monologue against a potential Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear
sites. "Israel cannot solve the problem alone," he said. "There is
a limit to what we can do."
Referring to the continuing tension between Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and President Barack Obama, Peres said:
"I cannot tell you what Bibi's considerations are on the subject
of Iran. I am not his spokesman and also not [Defense Minister
Ehud] Barak's. That's not my job. I am not looking for
confrontations with them. I do think that I can explain the
American pattern. America knows how to throw a punch when it
has to, in order to keep the world balanced. But the punches
follow a set procedure. They don't begin by shooting. They try
all the other means first — economic sanctions, political
pressure, negotiations, everything possible.
"But in the end," he added, "if none of this works, then
President Obama will use military power against Iran. I am sure
of it."
I was surprised by Peres's stridency. He had long been
perceived as a moderating force on Netanyahu, a mediator
between the prime minister and the international community that
was losing patience with him. A month earlier, Obama awarded
Peres the Presidential Medal of Freedom — America's highest
civilian honor. But the ceremony served only to deepen the rift
between Peres and Netanyahu, and three weeks later, as reports
became more frequent that Netanyahu was planning to send
bombers to Iran, Peres took advantage of his 89th-birthday
celebrations to speak out publicly against an attack. The prime
minister's office responded with ferocity, proclaiming, "Peres
has forgotten what the president's job is," and recalling that in
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1981, Peres opposed Prime Minister Menachem Begin's
decision to bomb Iraq's nuclear reactor, an act that many Israelis
consider a great achievement.
There are those who see Peres's confrontation with Netanyahu
as one of the principal reasons that an attack on Iran has not yet
materialized. "I will not attribute any such thing to myself,"
Peres told me. "Let others say it. I expressed my opinion, and
that was my duty. How influential was it? `Let another man
praise thee, and not thine own mouth,' " he said, quoting the
Book of Proverbs.
Peres's clash with Netanyahu over Iran is only one of many
disagreements between the two men. On the one hand,
Netanyahu is a conservative prime minister who relies on a hard-
line, hawkish coalition and who is likely to win next week's
Israeli elections by a landslide. On the other, Peres is Israel's
elder statesman, who, very late in his life, has attained a degree
of popularity that eluded him throughout his earlier career. In a
survey conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute, 84 percent
of Jewish respondents said Peres was trustworthy, while 62
percent thought Netanyahu was.
It is a pleasure to spend time with this man, whom David Ben-
Gurion took under his wing and who became a top official of the
Israeli defense establishment at age 24. Peres is a man of the
world, full of insights and curiosity that have not worn down
over the years. Though he is about to enter his 90s, he recalls in
vivid detail his encounters with central figures in the post-World
War II era: a Soviet joke competition started by President
Ronald Reagan, marathon drinking sessions with the German
defense minister Franz Josef Strauss and what he learned from
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the founder of modern Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew. But it is Ben-
Gurion, and the many years he spent in his proximity, that Peres
returns to time and again.
Although he says, "I take no interest in history, it bores me," he
devotes much effort to clarifying how significant his own
imprint on modern history has been. This may be in part
because, despite his enormous contribution to the power of the
Israel Defense Forces, Peres never served in the military.
Moreover, he was not a native-born Israeli "Sabra," having
immigrated to Palestine with his family at age 11.
Peres has been Israel's president since July 2007. He is a firm
believer in the power of social networks. There is no move that
he makes, no remark or observation that is not immediately
reported by his staff (which is, with the exception of a military
aide and a foreign-ministry representative, entirely female) on
Facebook, Twitter or Instagram. There was a time when Peres
made frequent mention of his conception of "a new Middle
East." Today, a new Middle East is indeed taking shape, but it is
not the one he envisioned. Over the past five months, we sat
down half a dozen times to talk about the current state of Israel-
Palestine relations, his relationship with and opinion of
Netanyahu, and what he now sees as the future of the Middle
East and Israel's (and his) role in it. The following answers have
been condensed from those talks.
"People usually tend to believe grim words, rather than positive
ones," he told me in December. "When you say, as I do, that you
are a confirmed optimist, you are seen as unbalanced. But if you
look at history, you will see that it is an ongoing failure for
pessimism, not for optimism. It has befallen me to live for many
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years, and throughout them I have seen that faith triumphs more
often than cynicism or skepticism. I think" — and here he
expressed harsh criticism of Netanyahu without explicitly
mentioning his name — "that if the people of Israel heard from
the leadership that there is a chance for peace, they would take
up the gauntlet and believe it."
You don't believe, then, that for now nothing should be done,
as Prime Minister Netanyahu proposes?
He may do nothing, but that doesn't mean that things won't be
done. This idea, that history is a horse that can be held by the
tail, is a foolish idea. After all, the fire can be lit in an instant:
another word, another shot, and in the end everyone will lose
control. If there is no diplomatic decision, the Palestinians will
go back to terror. Knives, mines, suicide attacks. The silence
that Israel has been enjoying over the last few years will not
continue, because even if the local inhabitants do not want to
resume the violence, they will be under the pressure of the Arab
world. Money will be transferred to them, and weapons will be
smuggled to them, and there will be no one who will stop this
flow. Most of the world will support the Palestinians, justify
their actions, level the sharpest criticism at us, falsely label us a
racist state. Our economy will suffer gravely if a boycott is
declared against us. The world's Jews want an Israel they can be
proud of and not an Israel that has no borders and that is
considered an occupying state.
What effect does the bad relationship between Obama and
Netanyahu have on the immediate future of Israel and the
Middle East?
The problem is not between individuals, but between those
individuals' policies. It's not whether they can have coffee
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together or not. Neither one is going to kick the other.
Although perhaps they would like to.
It makes no difference. The problem is that Obama would like to
reach peace in the Middle East and has to be convinced that
Israel agrees with this.
And he isn't convinced?
Of course, he's not convinced. He demanded an end to
settlements and got a negative response, and they [members of
the Likud-led government] are to blame for the ongoing activity
in the settlements. President Obama thinks that peace should be
made with the Muslim world. We, the State of Israel, do not
appear to be thinking along those lines. We must not lose the
support of the United States. What gives Israel bargaining power
in the international arena is the support of the United States.
Even if the Americans do not take part in the negotiations, they
are present at them. If Israel were to stand alone, its enemies
would swallow it up. Without U.S. support, it would be very
difficult for us. We would be like a lone tree in the desert.
What happened during the long period that you tried to
mediate between Netanyahu and Mahmoud Abbas [also
known as Abu Mazen, the president of the Palestinian
Authority]?
Abu Mazen and I met for long talks, with Netanyahu's
knowledge, and even reached more than a few agreements. To
my regret, in the end there was always some rupture, and I do
not want to go into the reasons for that now. This is not a simple
negotiation — but I thought the conditions exist to set out on the
path. Like the Oslo process, it has to be secret.
And when you say this to Netanyahu?
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He doesn't argue with me on this. It's not an issue of absolute
agreement or absolute disagreement. After all, he accepted my
proposal for economic peace to improve the standard of living of
the Palestinians in a number of areas. He also made the Bar-Ilan
speech [in which Netanyahu accepted the idea of a Palestinian
state]. We do not agree in our evaluations of Abu Mazen. I do
not accept the assertion that Abu Mazen is not a good
negotiating partner. To my mind, he is an excellent partner. Our
military people describe to me the extent to which the
Palestinian forces are cooperating with us to combat terror.
Today, there are 550,000 settlers in the West Bank and East
Jerusalem. There are those who believe that the settlers have
eliminated any chance of establishing a Palestinian state,
because no one would be able to evacuate these politically
motivated people from their homes, which is a necessary
condition for any agreement with the Palestinians.
The settlers have not eliminated the chance for the establishment
of a Palestinian state. The settlements today cover 2 percent of
the entire area. The Palestinians have already accepted the
Clinton parameters, which include leaving three blocs of Jewish
settlements and exchanging other territory for them. In my
opinion, many of the rest will leave of their own free will. The
difficulty with us is similar to that of the man with a hammer
who thinks every problem is a nail. Problems are not nails. If
there is good will, they can all be overcome. This applies, for
example, to the issue of water. Soon there will be a surplus of
water in Israel, thanks to seawater desalination, and we will be
able to make up the Palestinians' shortage of potable water.
Look, the whole world is in turmoil. The Palestinian problem
isn't the main problem in the Middle East. But there are a billion
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and a half Muslims. The Palestinian problem affects our entire
relationship with them. If the Palestinian problem were to be
solved, the Islamist extremists would be robbed of their pretext
for their actions against us. Of course, this requires concessions.
The problem in this case is not only the prime minister but also
his coalition. I am not claiming that peace with the Palestinians
will solve all the problems. People who think in sweeping terms
are being superficial. There are two things that cannot be made
without closing your eyes — love and peace. If you try to make
them with open eyes, you won't get anywhere. Peace is not an
exciting thing, and it entails accepting many compromises and
tedious details. A woman, too, can sometimes be exciting and
sometimes less so. There's no perfection. Making peace is
complicated.
But what kind of peace are we talking about? Look how
President Mohamed Morsi of Egypt sent you a personal
letter in July and then denied writing it.
Why does that matter? President Morsi has to answer a great
many questions inside his own party. I was surprised not by his
denial but rather by the fact that he sent me the letter. The whole
matter shows me that Morsi, like any leader taking office, faces
tough dilemmas. It is very easy to play the role of the abiding
Muslim when you are not in power, but things get complicated
when you are. Take, for example, the Egyptian economy, which
relies heavily on tourism. If they don't allow tourists to come
and spend their vacations the way they like, they won't come.
No bikini, no tourism.
What attitude should Israel adopt toward the Arab Spring?
You ask foolish questions. Israel is an island in an ocean. And
when I ask myself, "What has a greater impact, the ocean on the
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island, or the island on the ocean?" I have to maintain a certain
degree of humility. The important thing isn't how we relate to it,
but what is happening, why there is an Arab Spring. It isn't a
soccer match that we are refereeing. The young generation of the
Arab world is suppressed and unemployed. That is what brought
about the revolution and uprooted the dictatorships, not me and
not you. The storm that has hit the Middle East obliges each
state to choose whether to enter the scientific age or not. If it
does not, it will have no growth. The great and intriguing debate
in Egypt today is about the constitution, in effect about whether
to give women freedom or not. It is here that the Arab Spring
will be judged. President Obama asked me who I think is
preventing democracy in the Middle East. I told him, "The
husbands." The husband does not want his wife to have equal
rights. Without equal rights, it will be impossible to save Egypt,
because if women are not educated, the children are not
educated. People who cannot read and write can't make a living.
They are finished.
In Syria, the end of the Assad regime inches closer. Are you
concerned about their arsenal of chemical weapons?
Assad knows that using chemical weapons will immediately
invite an attack by outside elements. The whole world would
mobilize against him. It would be a suicidal act. On the other
hand, it's obvious that his days are numbered. A situation in
which, let's say, his palace comes under fire, could put him in an
irrational state and lead him to act out of despair. If the Syrians
dare to touch their chemical weapons and aim them at us or at
innocent civilians, I have no doubt that the world as well as
Israel will take decisive and immediate action. No less
important, Assad is liable to transfer the chemical weapons to
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Hezbollah, which from our point of view will constitute crossing
a red line. It is incumbent upon Israel to prevent such a thing
from happening, and it will take firm military action to do so.
During the several months
over which Peres and I spoke, the conflict between Israel and
Hamas intensified. In response to rocket fire from Hamas forces
in the Gaza Strip, Israel assassinated Hamas's military
commander and launched a bombing campaign that resulted in
widespread international censure and ended in a cease-fire
engineered by the United States and Morsi. In some cases in the
past, Peres expressed opposition to Israel's use of assassination
as a weapon to achieve its goals. He opposed the killing of
Khalil al-Wazir, the deputy of the P.L.O. leader Yasir Arafat, in
Tunis in 1988, and the targeted elimination of the spiritual
founder of Hamas, Sheik Ahmed Yassin, in Gaza in 2004. He
also protected Arafat from plots to kill or deport him. This time,
Peres expressed strong support for the Israeli operation. "This
wasn't a war or a military operation, but rather an educational
lesson for Hamas," he told me. "We acted in order to explain to
Hamas that it has to decide on one or the other. You want to
build houses? No problem. You want to build missile bases
inside those houses? Then we'll relate to those houses as targets
for our aircraft.
But during the campaign, civilians were killed on both sides,
many more in Gaza.
We made a supreme effort not to harm civilians in Gaza,
although it was very difficult to distinguish between Hamas
militiamen and innocent civilians. We have no desire to spill
blood, not ours and not that of others. The operation was short,
and the moment the lesson was conveyed and deterrence was
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established, it was stopped.
What lesson do you think Hamas learned?
Hamas will now start taking care. Even there, the understanding
must penetrate that there's no such thing as a cocktail of gunfire
and peace.
The political leader of Hamas, Khaled Meshal, came to Gaza
in December to celebrate the organization's 25th
anniversary. He delivered a blunt speech, indicating that it's
not at all clear that deterrence was achieved. Perhaps the
time has come to conduct a dialogue with Hamas?
If Hamas accepts international demands, forsakes terror, stops
firing missiles at us and recognizes the existence of the State of
Israel, it will be possible to open negotiations. Where did this
Khaled Meshal suddenly pop out of, with his words that come
straight from the Middle Ages? Precisely now, when the whole
world is tired of wars and violence, he arises out of the dark of
night with these sadistic desires to strike and to murder? Does he
really think that they will be able to destroy the State of Israel,
with the I.D.F. and our intelligence services? That we are a
bunch of turkeys that will march in formation to a Thanksgiving
feast?
You didn't think that Arafat should be assassinated.
No. I thought it was possible to do business with him. Without
him, it was much more complicated. With who else could we
have closed the Oslo deal? With who else could we have
reached the Hebron agreement? On the other hand, I tried to
explain to him, for hours on end, a complete educational course:
how to be a true leader. We sat together, with me eating from his
hand. It took courage. I told him he must be like Lincoln, like
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Ben-Gurion: one nation, one gun, not innumerable armed forces
with each firing in a different direction. At first, Arafat refused,
he said, "La, la, la" [Peres does a fairly convincing imitation of
Arafat saying "no" in Arabic], but later he said, "O.K." He lied
right to my face, without any problem [regarding promises to
fight Palestinian militias and insurgencies].
You were asked by many important people to run against
Netanyahu and reunite the center-left. Do you regret not
doing it?
They pressed me hard, but I concluded that I should not run, for
reasons I do not wish to elaborate on. I was elected president for
a seven-year term, and I will carry out this commitment. My
record is the only way to judge me honestly. I do not think there
are many people in the world who can say they managed to
bring down a 600 percent inflation rate, create a nuclear option
in a small country, oversee the Entebbe operation, set up an
aerospace industry and an arms-development authority, form
deep diplomatic relations with France, launch a Sinai campaign
to open the Straits of Tiran and put an end to terror from Gaza. I
do not, perish the thought, claim to have done all this alone. I
just think that perhaps without me it would not have happened.
Yitzhak Shamir was prime minister for seven years. So what? I
don't think my record is inferior to his.
You have never spoken much about your wife, Sonia, and for
decades she was absent from your public life. Why?
Sonia always told me that she married a kibbutz cowman, not a
politician. She didn't like appearing in public, and she didn't
like titles. In family life, you need two things. Both love and
compromise.
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You didn't seem to compromise so much, but she did.
She compromised, and so did I. I never, ever insisted, never
asked her, if it wasn't necessary, for her to come. I never said,
"Come for appearance' sake." If I'd said it was for appearance'
sake, she would never have come.
Still, I imagine that over all those years, you had arguments
about when she would go with you and when not.
There were arguments, but there was very deep love, both from
my side and from hers. It was the only love in my life. She gave
me the greatest gift a wife can give a husband — she brought up
our children exemplarily. She knew that sometimes I couldn't
come to a child's party, and she forgave me. And if it served the
state, she came with me. If it served my career: "No, sir. A
family's life is at home," she would tell me. "Don't mix things
up." She came to the Nobel Prize ceremony because she thought
the prize was being awarded to the state and not only to me.
Five years ago, when you became president, she wanted you
to not take office. What happened?
Sonia told me: "It's enough. You've done your share. Come,
let's live these years together." I told her: "First of all, I don't
know what to do with free time. Second, I think that I can fulfill
a duty here, too, serve the country, unite it." She said to me: "Go
your way. I'm staying here." There was nothing to do about it.
Women get edgy about things men will never understand. I
packed a bag, and I left home.
Peres moved into the president's official residence in Jerusalem.
Sonia stayed on in their modest apartment in north Tel Aviv. In
January 2011, one of their grandchildren found her dead in her
home, apparentlyfrom cardiac arrest. Peres rushed to the
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apartment and kissed her on theforehead before she was taken
away.
You have surrounded yourself with female aides. You told
me once that you had many fine male assistants who later
went on to betray you. Looking back, are you sorry that
from the beginning it wasn't only women?
I have always had women around me. Women have a clear-cut
advantage in their ability to read people, and I trust their eye a
lot more. Each woman is born a mother, and every man dies a
baby. There's no woman who thinks a man is fully grown up.
Here, his spokeswoman says, "Good, now give a
nonchauvinistic reply."
"I've been chauvinistic?" Peres asked
"It's even irritating me," she said "You are having such a good
time with this man-talk. Excuse me, you didn't pick women
because they treat you like a baby."
"Ask anyone," he said. "I had the best bureaus in the country. I
never boycotted men, but Ifound women with remarkable
managerial talent."
"You've corrected yourself a little bit," she said.
You are nearly 90 years old. Does the idea of death bother
you?
No. It is only logical. Without death, there wouldn't be life. I
was given my life, those two and a half billion seconds: Young
man, decide what you want to do with it. I did some reckoning,
and I decided to do something with those seconds, to make a
difference, to affect the lives of millions of people. I think I
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decided correctly. I got my life as a gift. I'll give it up without
an overdraft.
Will you live to see peace in the Middle East?
I think and believe so. If I have another 10 years to live, I am
sure that I will have the privilege of seeing peace come even to
this dismal and wonderful and amazing part of the world.
Ronen Bergman, an analystfor the Israeli newspaper Yedioth
Ahronoth, is the author of "The Secret War With Iran" and a
contributing writerfor the magazine.
Mick 2.
The Economist
Jack Lew: A new name on the dollar
Jan 10th 2013 -- TREASURY secretaries are often picked based
on the challenges they will confront. Barack Obama tapped
Timothy Geithner, a central banker and veteran crisis manager,
in late 2008 when the global financial system was in freefall.
Some four years later, Mr Obama's priority is dealing with the
resulting deficit. And so he is expected to name Jack Lew, his
chief of staff and former budget director, to succeed Mr
Geithner.
Mr Lew has spent most of his career on budget issues, starting in
1979 as an aide to Tip O'Neill, the then-speaker of the House of
Representatives. He ran the Office of Management and Budget
for Bill Clinton from 1998 to 2001. and for Mr Obama from
2010 to 2012.
There had been speculation that Mr Obama would appoint a
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high-profile outsider, perhaps from Wall Street, to repair
relations with business and build bridges to Republicans in
Congress. Mr Lew, by contrast, is the consummate insider. He is
almost unknown outside of Washington. An orthodox Jew who
observes the Sabbath, his most distinctive trait may be his
signature, a series of loops that will need revision if it's going to
be legible on America's currency.
The fiscal challenge Mr Lew inherits is almost as daunting as the
financial abyss that greeted Mr Geithner. America's deficit,
around 6% of GDP this year, should decline in coming years as
the economy improves, but then head inexorably higher as the
cost of entitlements such as Social Security (pensions),
Medicare and Medicaid (health care for the elderly and poor)
mount.
Mr Obama and Republicans in Congress failed several times to
strike a bargain that restrained entitlement growth and raised
more revenue by reforming the tax system. They settled for a
smaller deal earlier this month that freezes taxes for most
households, barely touches the deficit, and leaves several fiscal
land mines to defuse.
Automatic spending cuts of nearly $90 billion this year, split
between defence and domestic programmes, kick in at the start
of March. At the end of March, government operations will shut
down unless funding for roughly a third of the budget is
renewed. Most worrying is the prospect of another debt-ceiling
crisis. If Congress fails to act, the Treasury will run out of legal
borrowing authority between February 15th and March
1st, according to the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank.
Then it would be forced to stop paying some bills and risk
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defaulting on the national debt.
Negotiations with Republicans over the budget were already
likely to be contentious. Mr Obama's selection of Mr Lew may
make them more so. Unlike Mr Geithner, Mr Lew comes from
the Democratic Party's liberal wing, and his relations with
Congress are not particularly warm. During negotiations in 2011
to raise the debt ceiling and the subsequent deliberations of a
deficit supercommittee, Republicans complained that Mr Lew
lectured them on what was good for their own party while
repeatedly raising obstacles to a deal. At one point Mr Boehner
sought to exclude him from negotiations, according to an
account by Bob Woodward, a journalist and author.
Mr Obama probably doesn't care. As with Chuck Hagel, his
nominee for defence, Mr Obama wants cabinet secretaries who
are loyal and share his views, even if they rub Republicans the
wrong way. That said, Mr Lew's confirmation will face far less
opposition from Republicans than Mr Hagel's.
Despite having done a stint at Citigroup, Mr Lew's greatest
weakness is his inexperience in financial markets and the
international arena. Mr Obama could address that weakness by
naming a deputy (if the current deputy, Neal Wolin, departs)
with a background in those areas, such as David Lipton, the
number two at the International Monetary Fund, Michael
Froman, a White House adviser, or Lael Brainard, the treasury
undersecretary for international affairs.
Mr Lew has one major advantage Mr Geithner lacked four years
ago: a growing economy. In late 2008 and early 2009,
employment was plummeting by 600,000 to 800,000 per month.
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This past December, it grew 155,000, or 0.1%, from November,
close to its average for the year. Though unemployment remains
painfully high at 7.8%, it's remarkable the economy has
performed as well as it has given uncertainty over taxes and the
threat of government shutdown and default.
Firms and investors have come to trust Mr Obama and Congress
to avoid disaster at the last minute. Mr Lew's job will in large
part be to help the administration maintain that trust.
Miele 3
The Council on Foreign Relations
The Middle East in 2013: Don't Count on
It
Steven A. Cook
January 8, 2013 -- It is finally the second week of January,
meaning that the annual year-end/beginning lists and
prognostications are mercifully behind us. Some of these
catalogues of best-worst and "what to expect" are more
interesting than others-my favorites are best books and
articles—but mostly, these exercises are filler for the December
20-January 5 slowdown. The problem with the annual lists is
that because they are with one eye on the snow conditions at
Aspen or the water temperature in the Caribbean or the traffic on
I-95, they are often dashed off in a vacuum— with no context
and no sense of how these observations connect to each other in
useful analytic ways.
The Middle East in 2012 was surprising, exhilarating,
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depressing, and endlessly fascinating. Will it be the same in
2013? Odds are, yes, but there is really no way of forecasting
despite the penchant for lists. If we've learned anything in the
last few years, let's try not to build scenarios—a favorite
Washington, DC, exercise. Yet, we can take some of the
emerging trends and try to understand how they will shape the
politics of the region in 2013 and beyond.
Throughout 2012, some observers began to lament that the
"Arab spring" had become an "Islamist winter"—there were
more than a dozen articles and blog posts using this new
moniker. It certainly seems that way; Islamists have made gains
in Tunisia, Egypt, and are at the leading edge of the opposition
to the Assad regime in Syria, and even though Islamists have not
prevailed in the immediate post-Qadhafi period, the Islamist
extremism factor in Libya is high. Before the uprisings in the
Middle East, the received wisdom was that Islamists could be a
force for more open politics. Yet with political pressure on the
media, distinctly majoritarian approaches to the political
process, and efforts to foist particular interpretations of Islam on
society, the conclusion that Islamism would be progressive
seems like misplaced faith. Pretty grim.
Still, all is not necessarily lost. The media and much of the
academic as well as policy worlds want to focus on the Islamist
end of the political spectrum, and for good reason: Islamist
politics in the Middle East is dynamic, it's a good story, and the
Islamists are the people in charge. Yet, the emphasis on
Islamism obscures a far richer political environment of secular
nationalists, leftists, and liberals who have a powerful message
of their own. This is not something new, however. Politics in
the region may have seemed to be a two-dimensional game
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between regimes and those who claimed that Islam is the
solution, but there was always a broader political debate.
Indeed, prior to the uprising in Egypt in January 2011, liberal
ideas framed much of the public discourse. Both the hated
National Democratic Party and the Muslim Brotherhood
appropriated liberal ideas about political reform for their own,
ultimately non-democratic ends, but the fact that both the
Brothers and the alleged reformers of the old regime felt it was
necessary to leverage liberal principles says something about the
power of those ideas.
It is true that Islamists seem to have run the table in the region,
especially in Egypt, but many in the region do not seem
particularly happy with the way the Islamists have approached
governance. Observers will tell you it is all about bread and
jobs, which is only true to a point. The three weeks or so of
protests in Egypt in late November and early December weren't
about economic grievances, they were about President
Mohammed Morsi's power grab. The problem is, of course, that
liberal, secular, nationalist, and leftist opposition groups cannot
get their acts together when it comes to the formal political
process. There are already splits in Egypt's National Salvation
Front, which was created during those tense moments where
Egyptians of all walks and political suasions expressed their
disapproval of Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood's
authoritarian moves. Even if the secular-oriented opposition
throughout the Middle East fails politically, their ideas will
remain important in the national debates about the best way
forward. Just watching the Muslim Brothers, the Salafis, and
extremists will tell us much about the Middle East in 2013, but
it will not give observers a full view of the complex and multi-
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layered politics of the Arab world.
A lot of these politics revolve around national empowerment
and dignity. In other words, "nationalism" actually means
something in post-uprising societies. To be sure, nationalism has
always been a powerful force in the Middle East-as it is in
most places—but the now deposed leaders in the region were
not credible nationalists. Mubarak was completely
compromised. Qadhafi was once an exemplar of Arab
nationalism, but because his ideas were so clearly delusional, it
was hard for anyone, save a relatively small group of die-hards,
to take him seriously. Tunisia's Ben Ali sacked the country's
first leader after independence and nationalist par excellence,
Habib Bourguiba, but was unable to use his predecessor's
legacy for political effect because of the police state he built
alongside obscene corruption. Assad is Alawi and dependent on
Iran, neither of which helps even if you consistently claim that
Syria is the "beating heart of Arab nationalism." With the
exception of Syria, which has deteriorated into a gruesome civil
war as Assad hangs on, you now have leaders in the region who
can make legitimate claims to be good or better nationalists than
their predecessors. That is why nationalist ideas are bound to be
more important and potent going forward. When Mubarak, for
example, made some sort of nationalist appeal, it was generally
met with a collective yawn or derision. More credible leaders
who can assert that they are pursuing policies specifically for
their country's interests are likely to have more political success.
The renewed usefulness of nationalism is going to make the
Middle East even tougher for outsiders. It is too much to say
that external actors will be gone; despite the tumult and
economic troubles of the present moment, the West and the
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United States, in particular, continue to have significant
influence. Nevertheless, as the calendar turned over it was hard
to draw any conclusions about the foreign policy trajectories of
various countries in the Middle East. It stands to reason that it
is going to be difficult to replicate the U.S.-friendly regional
political order that prevailed until late 2010. In a broad sense,
the Gulf states remain firmly aligned with the United States, as
does Ankara and Jerusalem. No doubt a powerful group, but
everywhere else remains in flux, making it hard to determine
how and with whom the United States can/will be able to work
to achieve its interests in the region.
It is hardly bold to suggest that the defining features of Arab
politics in the old year—demands for democratic government,
economic opportunity, national dignity, and fierce contestation
over who gets to define political and social institutions—will
continue to animate the region in the new one. Yet, observers
consistently fail to see how tightly these issues are woven
together, setting them up for some big surprises in 2013.
Steven A. Cook is the Hasib J. Sabbagh Senior Fellowfor
Middle Eastern Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations and
a noted expert on the Arab world and the Middle East.
Nrtick 4.
Al-Monitor
Iran Top Backer of Palestinian Islamic
Jihad
Abeer Ayyoub
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January 9 2013 -- As far as the Al-Quds Brigades, the armed
wing of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, are concerned, 2012 was
their golden year. For the first time, it managed to use
qualitative weapons that seemingly altered the pace of the Israeli-
Palestinian conflict.
Often taking a backseat to Hamas' Izz ad-Din al-Qassem
Brigades, Islamic Jihad's fighters have become a key component
of Gaza's defense, proving their improved capabilities in Israel's
latest Pillar of Defense.
Abu Ahmad, Al-Quds Brigades spokesperson, referred to the
four years between the Israeli assault on Gaza in 2008-2009 and
the most recent in November 2012 as the reason behind the
progress. Islamic Jihad fighters intensified their training
following Israel's war on Gaza in 2008-2009, including
receiving a significant upgrade to its weapons capabilities and
logistical support from foreign friends, most notably Iran.
"The last assault was such a fruitful experience for us; it was
such a practical training that obviously proved we have
developed," he told Al-Monitor.
Much of Islamic Jihad's military improvements can be attributed
to support in recent years from Iran and Syria, according to
Mukhaymar abu Sa'ada, political analyst and lecturer at Al-
Azhar University.
"The armed wing of the Islamic Jihad has been receiving Iranian
and Syrian support recently, which allowed it to have a marked
precedence on the ground," he said.
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Abu Ahmad confirmed that Iran remains Islamic Jihad's main
supporter, but added that there were other minor foreign
contributors which he refused to disclose. Iranian support was
not a choice for Islamic Jihad, Abu Ahmad stressed, as Tehran
was the only foreign state willing to support the Palestinian
resistance.
"We are not the only Palestinian armed group that receives an
Iranian support, but we are the one that admits it the loudest. We
feel it's like an inevitable gratitude," he told Al-Monitor.
"I wonder why Iranian support for Palestinian armed groups is
not acceptable as we are the victims, while the American support
for Israel is acceptable despite Israel being the aggressor," he
added.
Islamic Jihad has been receiving Iranian backing since it was
founded in the 1970s. The support is not only limited to military
aid, Tehran also sponsors families of Islamic Jihad prisoners and
injured fighters of the faction.
Hamas' strained ties with the Islamic Republic over the Syrian
crisis have not hindered Islamic Jihad's relationship with
Tehran, and thus, Iran's ability to influence Palestinian affairs in
the Gaza Strip.
The benefits of its close ties to Iran were revealed in Islamic
Jihad's improved performance in the latest confrontation with
Israel.
Islamic Jihad was the first to fire long-range rockets at Tel Aviv
in the latest round, and in the view of abu Sa'ada, has moved to
the top of the military brass out of all the armed groups in Gaza.
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Details released last week on Al-Quds Brigades website revealed
that it lost 31 fighters, fired 933 rockets, killed 3 Israelis and
wounded tens more in the latest conflict with Israel.
It also demonstrated its newly improved cyber capabilities,
succeeding for the first time to hack the cell phones of more than
5,000 Israeli soldiers, sending threatening text messages in
Hebrew in what the armed wing termed the "War of Nerves."
Al-Quds Brigades boast a force of thousands of fighters who
work according to different tasks. Fighters do not usually
operate together on the field unless there is an Israeli ground
invasion, like in the 2008-09 war. During the Pillar of Defense,
Islamic Jihad only deployed its rocket unit.
Since the cease-fire was implemented in November, Israel has
committed continued violations, including shooting at farmers
near the border and arresting fishermen almost on a daily basis.
But, like Hamas, Islamic Jihad says it is committed to respecting
the cease-fire, and played a major role in Egypt's mediation
efforts.
Abu Ahmad said that his faction insisted on having the item of
"right of response" included in the cease-fire deal, and warned
that his movement will not stand idle should Israeli violations
continue.
"There's an Egyptian committee that's tracking the cease-fire,
Israeli violations and our commitment, but if Israel crosses the
red line, we will certainly respond," he warned.
In an ominous sign of the fragility of Hamas' ability to restrain
Palestinian factions, Abu Ahmad stressed that his faction
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reserves the right to respond to any Israeli attack without
consulting Hamas, citing an "agreement that was previously
made to respond to any serious Israeli violation."
The two armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad are, for the
time being, coordinating to maintain the cease-fire, but their
fighters rarely cooperate on the ground when violence flares.
Islamic Jihad sustained some damage to its infrastructure in the
latest Israeli attack, but most was unscathed. Improving its
military infrastructure and ability to hide its weapon storage
facilities from Israel is one of the main objectives for Islamic
Jihad following Pillar of Defense.
"Every offensive Israel wages on Gaza is usually harder than the
previous. This is why we are focusing now to strengthen our
infrastructure and to store more weapons," Abu Ahmad said.
Al-Quds Brigades has also recently began producing its
weapons locally due to the increasing challenges of smuggling
weapons through the Gaza tunnels that cross into Egypt. It is
also much easier to receive financial support to produce the
necessary weapons at home, with blueprints supplied.
"Our local rockets proved their high level of proficiency,
especially in the latest round of the battle," Abu Ahmad said.
While headlines around the world have largely credited Hamas
with achieving a new balance with Israel, it cannot be
undernoted that the actions of Islamic Jihad have significantly
contributed to the new reality on the ground.
Abeer Avvoub graduatedform the Islamic University of Gaza
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with a BA in English literature. She is a former human rights
researcher turned journalist whose work has appeared in Al
Masry Al-Youm, The Daily Mirror, and Haaretz.
Article 5.
Project Syndicate
The World in 2030
Joseph S. Nye
9 January 2013 -- What will the world look like two decades
from now? Obviously, nobody knows, but some things are more
likely than others. Companies and governments have to make
informed guesses, because some of their investments today will
last longer than 20 years. In December, the United States
National Intelligence Council (NIC) published its guess: Global
Trends 2030: Alternative Worlds. The NIC foresees a
transformed world, in which "no country — whether the US,
China, or any other large country — will be a hegemonic power."
This reflects four "megatrends": individual empowerment and
the growth of a global middle class; diffusion of power from
states to informal networks and coalitions; demographic
changes, owing to urbanization, migration, and aging; and
increased demand for food, water, and energy. Each trend is
changing the world and "largely reversing the historic rise of the
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West since 1750, restoring Asia's weight in the global economy,
and ushering in a new era of `democratization' at the
international and domestic level." The US will remain "first
among equals" in hard and soft power, but "the `unipolar
moment' is over." It is never safe, however, to project the
future just by extrapolating current trends. Surprise is inevitable,
so the NIC also identifies what it calls "game-changers," or
outcomes that could drive the major trends off course in
surprising ways.
First among such sources of uncertainty is the global economy:
will volatility and imbalances lead to collapse, or will greater
multipolarity underpin greater resilience? Similarly, will
governments and institutions be able to adapt fast enough to
harness change, or will they be overwhelmed by it? Moreover,
while interstate conflict has been declining, intrastate conflict
driven by youthful populations, identity politics, and scarce
resources will continue to plague some regions like the Middle
East, South Asia, and Africa. And that leads to yet another
potentially game-changing issue: whether regional instability
remains contained or fuels global insecurity. Then there is a set
of questions concerning the impact of new technologies. Will
they exacerbate conflict, or will they be developed and widely
accessible in time to solve the problems caused by a growing
population, rapid urbanization, and climate change?
The final game-changing issue is America's future role. In the
NIC's view, the multi-faceted nature of US power suggests that
even as China overtakes America economically — perhaps as
early as the 2020's — the US will most likely maintain global
leadership alongside other great powers in 2030. "The potential
for an overstretched US facing increased demands," the NIC
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argues, "is greater than the risk of the US being replaced as the
world's preeminent political leader."
Is this good or bad for the world? In the NIC's view, "a collapse
or
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