Pakistan's Imran Khan should have learnt from Erdogan's dealing with the army

by Omar Ahmed

Pakistan is going through a constitutional crisis after Prime Minister Imran Khan avoided a no-confidence vote on Sunday which was initiated by opposition legislators late last month in an attempt to oust him amid accusations of economic mismanagement and spiralling inflation. In response, Khan claimed that a "foreign conspiracy" was being hatched by the US to overthrow his government over its "independent" foreign policy posturing which was steering the country away from the West and closer to the Sino-Russian axis.

Israeli doubts are growing about relying on the United States

by Dr Adnan Abu Amer

The Russian-Ukrainian war has caused alarm bells to ring in Israel's decision-making circles because of what are seen as growing doubts about the US as a reliable ally. Ukraine was basically left alone to deal with Putin; Iran is doing what it wishes; and the humiliation of the withdrawal from Afghanistan hangs heavy in the international air. Together, this is pushing Israelis to ask if they can trust the US in wartime; or is it changing too much and is now too weak?

While the West is preoccupied with pronouns and 'cancelling', actual power is shifting eastwards

by Omar Ahmed

As the first conflict to take place in the era of popular cancel culture, the widespread social media backlash against Russia's invasion of Ukraine last month and ongoing military operations was expected.

This anti-Muslim hate campaign is tearing India apart

by P. K. Niaz

The virulent hate campaign by Hindutva forces promoted by the ruling right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and subsequent rise in public and institutional Islamophobia, have combined to create panic among India's 204 million Muslims, the country's largest minority community.

Boris Johnson's 'good' versus 'evil' hyperbole dishonours the victims of the US invasion of Iraq

by Nasim Ahmed

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said at the weekend that he had "never seen such a stark division between good and evil," as he charged Russian president Vladimir Putin of "trying to crush a blameless, innocent civilian population." What on earth did he mean?

Putin's invasion and its effects are horrific, and the humanitarian crisis will be around for some time. However, like many others, when I hear politicians talking about "good" and "evil" it is almost always evidence of propaganda.

Western racism at its worst

by Dr Amira Abo el-Fetouh

They have always stressed the importance of human rights, the right of all people to live a free and dignified life, and equality among all human beings, but when it actually comes down to it, this mask has fallen, and the true face and hateful racism of Western states has been exposed. Such slogans about equality have been revealed to be a sham by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. They are so hollow that they are clearly not even believed in, never mind applied equally.

The World Social Forum and the Peace Agenda

by Mauri Cruz

The world is terrified to watch the war in Ukraine, which has global importance because it involves the second largest nuclear power. But the world did not go to war with Russian military operations. There are other wars going on, though not reported. Starting with the unauthorised occupation of Palestine, the Israeli military killed 219 Palestinians, including 63 children in May 2021 alone.

It's time for Palestinians to lobby for a 'one state' solution

by Nizar Milbes

Israel has benefited greatly from the lack of consensus among the Palestinian factions in occupied Palestine and the diaspora in terms of the solution that they actually want to see. The occupation state is skilled at divide and rule, allowing Hamas to thrive in Gaza for decades and strengthening the Palestinian Authority while preventing any kind of reconciliation between the two.

Orientalism, Ukraine and the social disease of selective solidarity

A couple of weeks ago, I stood in front of my most diverse group of students and the largest class I have had since I began teaching in 2020. It was my first face-to-face cultural content seminar since the start of the pandemic, and I hesitated for a second, knowing that what I was about to say would shake the students out of their comfort zone.

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