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MUST-READS
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The ISIS Conflict Has Saturated the American Mind
In a recent NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, 94 percent of Americans said they were following the news of the horrendous and tragic beheadings of American journalists at the hands of ISIS. That number is astounding, seeing how public knowledge of the news can often be lacking.
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Yemen: Power Vacuum In Sana’a Hampers Aid Response
Following their victory, the Houthis quickly took control of other government facilities. At the same time, political parties endorsed a UN brokered deal that officially brought an end to the fighting. The agreement, signed by the Houthis and major political parties with President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi’s endorsement, called for the creation of a new government, a reduction in fuel prices and granted the Houthis a larger say in governmental decisions.
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Khashoggi – Saudi Arabia and the Houthis
We should realize the importance of the massive change that took place in Yemen last Monday. It is the birth of a new Yemen, added to the birth of a new Syria, a new Iraq and a new Arab world. However, I'll start the story from far away, from Italy to be exact.
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Oil Prices Continue Decline, Pressured by Saudi Action to Defend Market Share
But the sudden drop on Thursday was seen as a response to Saudi Arabia’s signaling on Wednesday to the markets that it was more interested in maintaining market share than in defending prices. Saudi Aramco, the national oil company, stunned markets by announcing that it was cutting prices by about $1 a barrel to Asia, the crucial growth market for the Persian Gulf producers, as well as by 40 cents a barrel to the United States.
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The Case Against Qatar
What Doha saw in the Muslim Brotherhood was a combination of religiosity and efficacy that seemed parallel to its own. Moreover, the Qatari ruling family sought to differentiate itself from competing monarchies Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), both of which frown upon political Islam as dangerously power-seeking. It was pragmatism, argues Salah Eddin Elzein, head of the Al Jazeera Center for Studies, a think tank associated with the Qatar-owned satellite network. "Islamists came [to the region] in the 1980s, and Qatar was trying to ally itself with the forces that it saw as those most likely to be the dominant forces for the future."
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Saudi firm funding boat-shaped Tunisia hospital project
Saudi Arabian investors Lalei Al Barakah Est. are backing a project to build a sailing boat-shaped hospital in Tunisia's new Economic City.
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Eating Out in Jeddah: Saudi Dining & Top Cultural Restaurants
Jeddah, one of the most easygoing areas in Saudi Arabia, has a long history as an important centre for trade and cultural interchange. The city’s cuisine reflects this, blending the flavours of East and West to delicious effect. Jeddah’s restaurants, done out in elaborate Hijazi décor, make dining in the historic city a delight, so we’ve updated our Jeddah restaurant guide to bring you eight more unmissable venues in Saudi’s best culinary destination.
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With the rise of Islamic State, Iraq is splintering along religious and ethnic lines
In the wake of Islamic State’s rise, small religious minorities such as Christians and Yazidis — a group that draws from various religious traditions — have sought refuge in Kurdish areas. Some say they hope to flee the country, never to return. The people left behind in areas captured by the Islamic State will increasingly be “one color,” said Hamed al-Maliki, an Iraqi writer, meaning they will have the same Sunni beliefs and customs.
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Iran’s UN demand emerges as hitch in nuclear talks
Western diplomats said if a final nuclear deal is reached, the United States and European Union would quickly waive and then lift unilateral, proliferation-related economic sanctions on Iran that would provide a rapid windfall to Iran's economy. (However, the US trade embargo on Iran, enacted after Iran's 1979 seizure of the US embassy and hostage crisis, would remain in place, a senior US official said.) A new UN Security Council resolution outlining the deal and what steps all sides had agreed on would also be passed, western diplomat said.
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The Economist explains: The many names of ISIS (also known as IS, ISIL, SIC and Da’ish)
There is a long history of pinning unpleasant-sounding names on unpleasant people. Rather as the term Nazi caught on in English partly because of its resonance with words such as "nasty", Da'ish rolls pleasurably off Arab tongues as a close cousin of words meaning to stomp, crush, smash into, or scrub. Picking up on this, France has officially adopted the term for government use, with its foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, explaining that Da'ish has the added advantage of not granting the group the dignity of being called a state.
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