China’s President Xi Jinping recently toured the Central Asian republics, offering energy and transportation infrastructure contracts. This continues China’s strong push into a region formerly dominated by Moscow and courted off and on by Washington.
To be a full player in a genuinely democratic Egyptian political system, the Brotherhood has to embark on an ideological, doctrinal, and organizational transformation.
Egypt’s committee of 50 drafting constitutional amendments is showing surprising signs of life, but it is not likely to change the underlying political dynamics.
Despite resisting military rule following the revolution, Egypt’s liberal opposition gambled on an alliance with their former foes that may eventually prove detrimental to their own interests.
Egypt’s morass, together with the unrest in Turkey, has plunged political Islam into a crisis of democratic confidence.
As Obama seeks support for a bombing campaign against Syria, the Arab League has held the Assad regime responsible for the use of chemical weapons and called for international action.
Violence before and after the coup in Egypt was a bitter blow to EU foreign policy leaders, but there may yet be a role for Europe's soft power in establishing political dialogue.
Are Egypt’s current rulers making the same mistake as their Muslim Brotherhood predecessors of pushing through a constitution that will alienate their allies and agitate their opponents?
Moroccan reactions to Egypt’s coup are threatening to marginalize the PJD.
Egypt’s revolutionaries have opened the door to an authoritarian comeback by supporting the bloody crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood. Now, they seem to be closing their eyes and hoping for the best.











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