The Missing Mahatma
Why has the Palestinian cause failed to produce a Martin Luther King-like leader with a platform based on non-violence?
Why has the Palestinian cause failed to produce a Martin Luther King-like leader with a platform based on non-violence?
Gershom Gorenberg The Weekly Standard Apr 2009 45min Permalink
The sudden, bloody transformation of normal citizens into rebels.
Robert F. Worth New York Times Magazine Mar 2011 30min Permalink
No one really knows the script for days like these, and neither did we.
Anthony Shadid, Lynsey Addario, Stephen Farrell, Tyler Hicks New York Times Mar 2011 10min Permalink
The surreal afterlife of the once-ascendant Dubai, where “the legacy of oil has made everything worthless.”
A. A. Gill Vanity Fair Apr 2011 Permalink
On the future of the liberal Israeli newspaper Haartez.
David Remnick New Yorker Feb 2011 45min Permalink
One of most popular Libyan figures amongst Western intellectuals and democracy advocates is… Qaddafi’s second son, Saif.
Eliza Griswold The New Republic Jul 2010 15min Permalink
On Colonel Muammar Qaddafi, “the permanent revolutionary,” and his son Seif.
Andrew Solomon New Yorker May 2006 55min Permalink
Omar Mohammed (most certainly not his real name), a former Iraqi cop, is widely believed to be the most skilled and prolific terrorist hunter alive. Recently, he personally killed two of Al-Qaeda’s senior commanders in Iraq. He has already been shot and blown up, and with U.S. forces on their way out, his chances of survival in Baghdad are slim.
Daniel Voll Esquire Mar 2011 Permalink
How an Iraqi expat conned the United States, without ever once being interviewed by an American official, into making the case that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. “Believe me, there was no other way to bring about freedom to Iraq.”
Helen Pidd, Martin Chulov The Guardian Feb 2011 Permalink
The story of three months spent training reporters in Saudi Arabia, where the press is far from free. “I suspected that behind the closed gates of Saudi society there was a social revolution in the making. With some guidance, I thought, these journalists could help inspire change.”
Lawrence Wright New Yorker Jan 2004 Permalink
An opinion piece on the structural causes of unrest in Egypt; the business fraternity, globalization, and the fate of Egyptian women.
Paul Amar Al-Jazeera English Feb 2011 Permalink
On the Cairo knifing of 82-year-old Nobel Prize winner Naguib Mahfouz and its aftermath.
Mary Anne Weaver New Yorker Jan 1995 55min Permalink
February 1st, 2011. Tahrir Square, Cairo.
Yasmine El Rashidi New York Review of Books Feb 2011 15min Permalink
Reporting from Kuwait on the week of its liberation, a brutal account of the atrocities committed during seven months of Iraqi occupation.
Michael Kelly The New Republic Mar 1991 15min Permalink
A primer on Egypt’s political landscape.
Adam Shatz London Review of Books May 2010 30min Permalink
A primer on Peretz, longtime owner/editor of The New Republic, committed Zionist, and author of the line “Muslim life is cheap.”
On gay life in Saudi Arabia.
Nadya Labi The Atlantic May 2007 25min Permalink
Last year, an Mossad hit squad traveled to Dubai to assassinate a Hamas leader. They completed their mission, but were later humiliated when a twenty-seven minute video of their movements was posted online. How their cover got blown.
Ronen Bergman GQ Jan 2011 25min Permalink
Anatomy of an international incident; how three idealistic young American hikers wandered across the Kurdistan-Iran border and ended up in Iranian prison charged with spying.
Joshua Hammer Outside May 2010 20min Permalink
The amiable international arms dealer and the sting.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker Feb 2010 35min Permalink
Published on the eve of Iran’s 2009 presidential election and subsequent protests, a look at the booze-fueled, hijab-less underground party scene in the capital.
How to spend $1.2 million per month on your laundry in Kuwait; the system of kickbacks and non-competitive contracts that made Halliburton/KBR the near-exclusive contractor in the Iraq war zone.
Michael Shnayerson Vanity Fair Apr 2005 35min Permalink
Nineteenth century Muslim-Christian hero Abd el-Kader, the “Algerian George Washington.”
Rany Jazayerli Rany on the Royals Jul 2010 25min Permalink
Foreign policy as architecture; how embassies went from lavish social hubs to reinforced strongholds.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Nov 2007 20min Permalink
A year after dozens died protesting his election and hundreds more were imprisoned, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad grants a rare interview to an American journalist.
John Lee Anderson New Yorker Aug 2010 30min Permalink