SMRs and AMRs

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

A Region’s Unrest Scrambles U.S. Foreign Policy

By MARK LANDLER
NYT

WASHINGTON — As the Obama administration confronts the spectacle of angry protesters and baton-wielding riot police officers from Tunisia to Egypt to Lebanon, it is groping for a plan to deal with an always-vexing region that is now suddenly spinning in dangerous directions.

In Egypt, where a staunch ally, President Hosni Mubarak, faced the fiercest protests in years on Tuesday, and Lebanon, where a Hezbollah-backed government is taking shape, the administration is grappling with volatile, potentially hostile forces that have already realigned the region’s political landscape.

These were surprising turns. But even the administration’s signature project in the region — Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations — became even more intractable this week, with the publication of confidential documents detailing Palestinian concessions offered in talks with Israel. The disclosure makes it less likely that the Palestinians will agree to any further concessions.

In interviews in recent days, officials acknowledged that the United States had limited influence over many actors in the region, and that the upheaval in Egypt, in particular, could scramble its foreign-policy agenda.

(More here.)

1 Comments:

Anonymous Chris Taus said...

The dominoes are going to start falling and the Zionists are going to really be aff chopped tsurris since Egypt has been their main ally against the Palestinians and in preparing to attack Iran.The dominoes are going to start falling and the Zionists are going to really be aff chorris tsurris since Egypt has been their main ally against the Palestinians and in preparing to attack Iran.

6:54 AM  

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