Germany’s New Foreign Policy in the Making Published: 19 August 2014 The Middle East is burning and, as usual, all eyes rest on Washington. What, then, is Germany willing and capable to contribute to the crisis management in Iraq? The diffuse reactions by politicians across the political spectrum point toward a significant paradigm shift. By Charlotte Beck
The Rehabilitation of Assad Published: 9 January 2014 Above all, the West wants stability in Syria. Because he has managed to sit out everything that has happened in recent years, the Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad seems to offer this very stability. But accepting the kind of stability Assad offers would mean having to forget the atrocities committed by his regime. By Bente Scheller
On the disappearance of Syrian activist Razan Zaitouneh: “Germany must keep up the pressure” Published: 17 December 2013 Razan Zaitouneh, prominent human rights solicitor and leading figure in the Syrian revolution, was abducted from her office in an armed raid in the Syrian city of Douma. Our Middle East office manager Bente Scheller spoke with Pelican Mourad about the abduction. By Bente Scheller and Pelican Mourad
Interview about Syria: "The world should do something serious and do it quickly." Published: 9 September 2013 The regime must not remain unpunished for the use of chemical weapons. If the U.S. and its allies do not act, the people themselves will feel even more isolated than before, and they will learn that there are no limits to the brutality.
Between paralysis and civil war: Lebanon and the Syria conflict Published: 29 July 2013 Lebanon is facing a complete paralysis of all state institutions, accompanied by a deteriorating security situation and a fragmentation of Lebanon into zones of sectarian conflict. The conflict in Syria is worsening the division within the country. By Doreen Khoury
Syria: Rape as a weapon of war Published: 4 July 2013 In wars, rape has been used as a tool to go beyond the physical and military defeat of the enemy, to subdue a society politically and morally. The present article, written by psycho-therapist Dr. Jamal Khalil Sobh, sheds light on the repeated war crime of rapes of women, including the recent tragic incidents in Syria. By Jamal Khalil Sobh
"Two years on, Syria’s revolution remains trapped in geostrategic calculations and military balance of power” Published: 27 June 2013 Dr. Ziad Majed is a Lebanese professor and political writer. The Syrian journalist Ahmad Silal talked with him about the international and Arab positions in relation to the Syrian revolution and the challenges that face it. By Ahmad Silal
Right and Left against the revolution Published: 24 May 2013 In Syria the majority of the population is in revolt against the authoritarian regime, that has ruled Syria since 1970. The United Nations called the situation recently "a civil war". But why is it that the far Right and certain far-Left groups in a number of Western nations agree in their hostility to the Syrian revolution? By Dr. Ziad Majed
"Syrian revolutionaries owe nobody an apology" Published: 11 April 2013 The Lebanese author and leftist activist Fawwaz Traboulsi has followed the the Arab revolutions as a writer and analyst, writing down his insights 2012 in his book „Democracy is Revolution“. Mohammad al-Attar met him for the interview about Syria in Beirut. By Mohammad al-Attar
Syria Says No to Bombs Published: 16 December 2008 Far from achieving the intended blow against al-Qaeda and Sunni insurgents in Iraq, the recent American incursion into Syrian territory undermines voices of moderation in Syria, and facilitates the recruitment efforts of extremist Islamist groups in a country that has every reason to be wary of the terrorist threat. By Sami Moubayed