Al Jazeera English Arrives on N.Y. Cable

Slowly but surely, al-Jazeera is spreading. And the more Americans watch it, the better.  NYT: CNN had the gulf war. Fox News had the war on terror. And Al Jazeera English had the Arab Spring.

But six months after widespread protests erupted in the Middle East, the Qatar-based Al Jazeera has not gained distribution on any major cable or satellite systems in the United States. The channel’s supporters say they feel it has been blacklisted; the distributors say they have to contend with limited channel space.

Undeterred, Al Jazeera English executives say they are making headway. On Monday, the channel will be carried in New York City for the first time, though only by subletting space from a channel owner. The channel has a foothold in Washington through a similar arrangement.

Posted in al-Jazeera | 1 Comment

China blames Muslim extremists for attack in Xinjiang

Even China is afraid of the inferno of revolution sweeping the Middle East and North Africa: The Guardian: “For the ruling Communist party the latest violence presents another tricky test of its control in Xinjiang, where Uighur and Han Chinese residents view each other with suspicion. Beijing has been wary of contagion from uprisings across the Arab world inspiring challenges to party power in China.”

Posted in China | Comments Off on China blames Muslim extremists for attack in Xinjiang

The Ramadhan of Revolution

The Guardian: It is usually the month of reflection and prayer, laying low in the heat of the day, before gathering to watch soap operas and feast as dusk falls.

But this year Ramadan is anticipated in Syria for different reasons: as an opportunity to intensify protests against Bashar al-Assad, despite fears the regime may fight back even harder.

Activists intend to exploit the increased daily attendance at mosques, which have over the past five months acted as gathering points for protests following Friday prayers. Many who do not regularly attend mosque do so during Ramadan, when prayers are believed to carry more weight that at other times of year.

Posted in Syria | Comments Off on The Ramadhan of Revolution

“The Shahs of Sunset”

The “Real Housewives” network announced Wednesday that it was developing a show with Ryan Seacrest tentatively titled “Shahs of Sunset” that will document Los Angeles’ colorful Iranian expat community. “The series will offer rich characters and relatable storylines about everyday life — love, work, friendship and family — steeped in a diverse culture, which is wildly entertaining and fun,” Seacrest said in a statement.

Colorful Iranian expat community in LA? You know they’re going to pick several Iranian versions of Mike the Situations in LA and parade them on TV as representing all of us Iranians in the US. And what a stupid name for the show to top it off… “The Shahs of Sunset,” really?

Posted in Iranian Diaspora | Comments Off on “The Shahs of Sunset”

Qassem Suleimani

Here’s an interesting profile on Quds commander Qassem Suleimani.  I wonder how much of it is true and how much is exaggeration and propaganda, though it’s still can be informative which is why I’m posting it.

Posted in Revolutionary Guards | Comments Off on Qassem Suleimani

Iran and Iraq: History’s Timeline

This is a good timeline of relations between Iran and Iraqafter ’79 but it’s only a history in terms of diplomatic relations. The people of the two countries have a long history that predates the modern era. In fact, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi Shi’is are of Iranian ancestry and Baghdad until a couple centuries ago was part of Iran.

The Guardian: 1979 A crucial year in the history of both countries. In February, Ruhollah Khomeini returns to Iran from Paris as leader of the Islamic revolution. In July, Saddam Hussein succeeds the ailing Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr as president of Iraq.

September 1980 Iraqi forces invade Iranian territories, starting a war which lasts for eight years. It is the longest conventional war of the 20th century, leaving more than a million people dead on both sides.

March 1988 Just a few months before the end of the war, Iraq uses chemical weapons against Kurdish rebels in the town of Halabja, just 10 miles from the Iranian border.

1990 After two years of silence, the two countries restore diplomatic relations for the first time since the war. Iran condemns Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, in what is known as the Persian Gulf war, despite newly restored relations.

2000 Improved bilateral relations. Thousands of Iranians pour into Shia holy cities such as Najaf and Karbala.

2002 In a state of the union address, US president George W Bush refers to Iran, Iraq and North Korea as an “axis of evil”, preparing ground for US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

2005 Ibrahim al-Jaafari of the pro-Iran Islamic Dawa party leads a transitional government in Iraq after Ahmed Chalabi drops out. In May, Iran’s foreign minister, Kamal Kharazi, goes to Iraq on a ministerial visit. In July al-Jaafari visits Iran and in November President Jalal Talabani becomes the first Iraqi head of state to visit Iran in the history of the Islamic republic.

September 2006 Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki visits Iran for the first time.

March 2008 Mahmoud Ahmadinejad makes an unprecedented visit to Iraq, the first Iranian president to do so in more than three decades.

2009 Tension escalates after Iranian troops briefly cross the border and occupy a disputed oilfield in Iraqi territories.

January 2011 Radical Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, the leader of Iraq’s Sadrist movement, returns to Iraq after three years of living in Iran. Fear grows of Iran’s influence in Iraq.

April 2011 Iraqi forces raid a camp of Iranian dissidents in north-eastern Iraq, killing 34. As part of a crackdown against members of the opposition People’s Mijaheedan of Iran, which helped Saddam during the Iran-Iraq war, the Iraqi government gives an ultimatum to the dissidents to abandon their camp for ever.

July 2011 Iran’s revolutionary guards entered Iraqi territories in the autonomous Kurdistan region, shelling Iraq-based Iranian Kurdish rebels of the Free Life Party of Kurdistan (PJAK). Scores of people on both sides have been killed during the armed conflicts between the two which is still going on.

Posted in Iran, Iraq | Comments Off on Iran and Iraq: History’s Timeline

A Post-American Day Dawns in the Mideast

Here’s an interesting piece in the NYTimes Op-Ed section by Ray Takeyh.  He makes some interesting points but makes ill-informed generalizations elsewhere.  Take this statement for example: “The struggle of the Middle East during the past century was a determined quest to exempt itself from great-power rivalry and superpower dominance. This is a populace that eagerly participated in bloody anti-colonial struggles, lent its sympathies to those calling for neutralism from the Cold War power blocs, and expressed its solidarity with third-world revolutionary resistance.”

Wait, did I miss something? What struggle is he talking about? Every country in the Middle East during the Cold War was aligned with one super power or another. Iran, Israel, the Saudis and the rest of the Gulf were with the Americans for most or all of the Cold War (Iran broke its pact with the US after ’79 and Israel and the US strengthen ties after the ’67 war). Iraq, Syria, and Libya were closely aligned with the Soviets. Even Egypt under Nasser, who sought to take Egypt on a non-aligned course, eventually threw in its lot with the Soviets only to have Nasser’s successor, Sadat, switch sides to the US. So what’s the deal with Takeyh’s generalization about “The struggle of the Middle East during the past century was a determined quest to exempt itself from great-power rivalry and superpower dominance.”?

Also, he adds prophetically: “The theocratic Iranian state has long abjured America’s entreaties and seems determined to obtain a bomb at all cost.”  Wait, I must not have gotten the memo, I didn’t realize that this is a fact now.

Posted in Middle East | 2 Comments

Where does the Brotherhood’s strength lie?

A short but informative article on the Muslim Brother.

Excerpt: “Internally, the Brotherhood is characterized by generational and intellectual diversity. The group adopts a comprehensive vision of Islam based on a flexible political and intellectual framework: its members can act as politicians or MPs, preachers of good manners, mystics or even revolutionaries when need be. It’s no surprise that such a versatile organization has included a conservative judge like Hassan al-Hodeiby as well as a revolutionary like Sayyed Qutb among its ranks.”

Posted in Egypt | Comments Off on Where does the Brotherhood’s strength lie?

Stephen Colbert on the Norwegian Terrorist

See the hilarious on-point video here.

Posted in Humor | Comments Off on Stephen Colbert on the Norwegian Terrorist

Teaser Trailer: “The Dark Knight Rises”

The blog used to contain more posts on movies. I’m going to post more trailers, that is, if good ones present themselves. Here’s the new teaser trailer to the highly anticipated “The Dark Knight Rises” out in July ’12.

Posted in Film, Trailers | Comments Off on Teaser Trailer: “The Dark Knight Rises”

The Norwegian Killer is Not an Anomaly

Anders Behring Breivik is not a lone wolf, as the media is portraying him. He is part of a wider problem. An industry that existed since before 9/11 but has burgeoned since then has systematically dehumanized Muslims and demonized Islam.  Look no further than the blogosphere to see what I’m talking about. (one such blogger, albeit a very insignificant one, constantly spews his hate on  iPouya.)  This wide-ranging industry has long sought to vilify Islam and Muslims and although some actors within that industry do not advocate violence against Muslims, a closer look suggests such action by implication.  Video games, movies, politicians, hearings, conferences, so-called experts like Daniel Pipes who state the Muslims should not be allowed to enter the American mainstream (presumably because they are evil), apocalyptic types like Glenn Beck all share in the responsibility. They may have not pulled the trigger or detonated the bomb, but they have helped foster an environment where Breivik was its logical endgame.   In the words of Marc Sageman, “a former C.I.A. officer and a consultant on terrorism, said it would be unfair to attribute Mr. Breivik’s violence to the writers who helped shape his world view. But at the same time, he said the counterjihad writers do argue that the fundamentalist Salafi branch of Islam ‘is the infrastructure from which Al Qaeda emerged. Well, they and their writings are the infrastructure from which Breivik emerged.'”

If Islam is evil, and Muslims are evil, then violence against them is righteous.  And although Breivik didn’t target Muslims, his manifesto shows that his ultimate goal was to bring attention to this “scurge” from the East and how Norwegian leaders, specifically from the Labour Party, have failed to stem the flow of “them” into Norway.

This entire mentality, and the industry that has laid the infrastructure for this type of thinking, is based on a thinking that the Muslim world is one extreme and the west is another.  Bin Ladenites and their ilk mirror this sort of thinking.  In other words, Breivik and Bin Laden have a very similar worldview, not to mention employ the same violent means to bring attention to their ridiculous causes. This simple worldview is an injustice to recorded history, which shows that one section of the world was never neatly partitioned off from other geographical locations.  To say there’s an East and a West is to do away with all the important nuances that do not fit neatly into this paradigm.  In other words, Muslims have learned nothing from the “West” and the “West” has not learned anything from the “East” and that they’ve always been fighting along an imaginary border, that no Christians lived or still live in the Middle East and that no Muslims ever had a presence in Europe until modern times.

Posted in 22 Khordad | 3 Comments

Saudi Arabia and Jordan: Dictatorships Standing Together

See the video here.

Posted in Jordan, Saudi Arabia | Comments Off on Saudi Arabia and Jordan: Dictatorships Standing Together

Updates

My apologies for the lack of updates. Please don’t ever think that I’m finished with the blog. I’ve been blogging for more than 5 years now and although there are months I blog more than others, I always update the blog at least a few times a month. I’ve been home in southern California since the onset of the summer and I’ve been reading a lot for my academic program and blogging a lot less, but I have been following news and events as always. In any case, I’ll be blogging more now that things are beginning to simmer down a bit on my end.

Posted in iPouya | Comments Off on Updates

Iran is singled out because it defies Washington

Foreign Policy Magazine – This is a really good interview. It’s a bit long so I’m not going to post the entire thing, and there are so many excerpts that if I wanted to post them all, I’d end up posting the whole interview. So, try to read it all the way through, and here’s an excerpt nonetheless:

The reason Iran’s nuclear program has become so controversial, therefore, has nothing to do with nuclear nonproliferation, any more than the war on Iraq had anything to do with weapons of mass destruction or terrorism. The problem with Iran is the same as that posed by Iraq, which is that it is too independent, too willing to defy orders from Washington, D. C. The U.S. used to support Iran’s nuclear program, when the country was under the Shah’s regime. The U.S. installed the Shah in 1953 after the CIA coup that overthrew the democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadeq for nationalizing Iran’s oil industry, for standing up to the West and saying that Iran’s oil belonged to the Iranian people.

Iran is singled out because it defies Washington. Israel is the only country in the region that actually possesses nuclear weapons. Unlike Iran, it is not a member of the NPT. The Western media constantly repeats that Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons is a threat to the region, and that its nuclear program risks sparking a nuclear arms race in the Middle East. Israel’s nuclear weapons, for some inexplicable reason, do not threaten to spark a nuclear arms race.

Posted in Iran | 1 Comment

Long-suppressed Shias shape new Iraq

See the video here.

Posted in Iraq, Islam | 1 Comment