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MUST-READS
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The U.S. Peace Corps Has Suspended Operations in Jordan
The U.S. Peace Corps has pulled all of its 37 volunteers from Jordan as terrorism and sectarian warfare continue to embroil the region.
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Opinion: The Long War
The disappointment with both presidents shows how delicate the dance can be between intervention and restraint—particularly in a generational struggle that unfolds across many fronts, in ever-evolving forms. In evaluating those difficult choices, the best compass is to seek in our strategy what Cold War thinkers called "solvency": a sustainable balance between the nation's ends and means.
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Yemen’s defense minister escapes Houthi-controlled Sanaa
Yemen's defense minister has fled Houthi-controlled Sanaa for Aden, officials said on Sunday, in a move expected to bolster President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi in his power struggle with the Shi'ite Muslim group.
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Obama: U.S. Would ‘Walk Away’ If No Good Iran Nuclear Deal
U.S. President Barack Obama has said the United States would "walk away" from nuclear talks with Iran if an acceptable deal cannot be reached with Tehran.
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Opinion: Keeping Iraq Unified Will Be Nearly Impossible
When the history of the second Iraq civil war is written, the death of Sheikh Qassem al-Janabi may prove notable for what it said about the rapidly closing window for national reconciliation, and for foreshadowing the ominous turn toward outright sectarianism that the fighting in Iraq has taken.
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Islamic State appears to be fraying from within
The anecdotal reports, drawn from activists and residents of areas under Islamic State control, don’t offer any indication that the group faces an immediate challenge to its stranglehold over the mostly Sunni provinces of eastern Syria and western Iraq that form the backbone of its self-proclaimed caliphate. Battlefield reversals have come mostly on the fringes of its territory, while organized opposition remains unlikely as long as viable alternatives are lacking and the fear of vicious retribution remains high, Syrians, Iraqis and analysts say.
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Mobily lifts Saudi Arabia, Egypt edges up
Mobily shares have been rising on hopes that the company will recover after the earnings debacle and receive some state support if necessary, as was the case with its smaller competitor Zain Saudi which had its tax payments deferred in 2013, helping it navigate a heavy debt repayment schedule. Saudi Arabia's government owns a 11.8 percent stake in Mobily and the firm's new chairman, Suliman bin Abdulrahman al-Gwaiz, is also governor of a huge state-owned fund, the General Organization for Social Insurance.
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Scholars Consider Netanyahu’s Speech before US Congress: Part 1
This is a truth that many in Congress simply refuse to accept, since like the prime minister they have repeatedly declared this would never be allowed to happen. Even the most recent iteration of the Kirk-Menendez sanctions legislation asserts that Iran must be “precluded from a nuclear breakout capability.” Wonderful as it would be to return to a past when that could be the case, in this world, that is now fantasy. As the U.S. intelligence community has consistently reported, including in February’s release of the 2015 Worldwide Threat Assessment: “Iran does not face any insurmountable technical barriers to producing a nuclear weapon, making Iran’s political will the central issue.”
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Saudi King Aims For New Sunni Bloc Vs Iran And ISIL
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry reassured the Saudis on Thursday that he was seeking no “grand bargain” with Iran, but Riyadh’s worries over Washington’s long-term commitment to the region underpin its desire for more Arab unity.
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Efficiency a rallying cry for oil producers
The message from Riyadh was obvious. If markets needed to be stabilized, every one, both OPEC and non-OPEC producers, needed to partake in any such adventure. And when non-OPEC crude producers declined to share the pain of cutting output, Saudi Arabia insisted on maintaining output so as not to cede their markets share to non-OPEC players. Still the decision not to cut output was not irrational. There was apparently a deep thinking process behind the decision not to cede markets share. Efficient producers should not give in to inefficient producers, Naimi insists.
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