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Great minds and all that
nadezhda (0)   Sep 21
This Turkey Won't Fly
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One picture says it all
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Obama's exercise in rhetoric
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Obama Grand Tour and McCain Circus Roundup
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Biden has Obama's Afghan back = update - and the Pentagon too
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Bush's Pakistan-Afghanistan-Iran "legacy" - updated
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Then WTF is a "bail-out"?
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Blogging making reporters more relevant
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Ignatius and Zakaria - new WaPo joint venture
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Reasserting US Hegemony: Russian rollback, Chinese containment and Iranian regime change
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What's up
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A "paddling" of lame ducks?
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Voices of the New Arab Public
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Time for a post-post-9/11 world?
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View Article  Christianism
This is a fascinating conceptualization of things, one that we've edged around at a few points in the course of my Political Islam in South Asia class but haven't yet tackled full-on. (One recommendation, made with qualifications, on the subject that Prof. Haqqani did make last week was a book by Tariq Ali called The Clash of Fundamentalisms which I gather elaborates more on the identities and goals of the major world fundamentalist ideologies.) Comparisons between Christian fundamentalism and Islamic fundamentalism often raise ire early on that prevents much further discussion, but I would really like to see this expanded upon. Unfortunately, I have a paper to be writing at the moment, so my thoughts will have to wait.
View Article  More Muslim ethnic clashes in provincial Asia - China & Thailand
Major provincial conflicts involving Muslims and majority ethnic or religious groups are hitting the news once again in Asia. This time in China. Martial law has been imposed in a rural portion of the central province of Henan after four days of ethnic clashes.
The fighting was between farmers of the country's ethnic Han majority and the Muslim Hui minority living in neighboring villages, as well as thousands of military police sent in to restore order. It appeared to be among the worst incidents of ethnic violence known to have taken place in China in recent years.

The latest unrest followed a clash this summer in a nearby village in which police fired rubber bullets at farmers protesting land seizures and anti-government rioting two weeks ago in the western city of Chongqing. The Henan fighting served as a stark reminder of the varied tensions tearing at this vast nation as it undergoes rapid social and economic change.
The situation in Thailand is becoming increasingly tense. As David Fulbrook writes in the Asia Times:
Thailand's own September 11 may be moving closer, accelerated by the government's tough but inept policy that is alienating moderate Muslims in the deep south, possibly opening the door to foreign hands. A brutal response by disgruntled Muslims to last week's carnage [the death of 78 Muslims detained in connection with riots] would severely test relations with Buddhist Thailand and Muslim-majority neighbors Indonesia and Malaysia, potentially fracturing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
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