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Friday, November 21, 2008 Last Update: 2:54 AM EST
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  US global dominance 'set to wane' | Iraqis protest against troop deal | Madonna granted divorce in London | Burma comic jailed for 45 years | Fierce gun battle rocks Mogadishu | India navy 'to go after pirates' | 'Elite troops' needed in DR Congo | French Socialists in run-off vote | 'Grape' is key to fossil puzzle | Found: Body of Copernicus, man who revealed the solar system | Otter makes 'perilous' sea crossing to new island home | Gallas will stay on - Winterburn | Man Utd suffer Brown injury blow | Send your video, pictures and story ideas | 'Not just pirates' | Mafia glamour | It's quiz time! | 'Geeking out' | 'Hindu terrorism' | War wounds | SA 'racist' killer faces prison | Argentine pension takeover passed | China woman loses fight for home | Presidency reform passed by Duma | Shoot-out in north Lebanon city | Bomb hits Pakistan Shia funeral | 'No justification' for Brand show | No agreement for US car bail-out | Asbestos victims win 'test case' | First test for interplanetary net | Hollywood talks over actors row | Google unveils customised search |
Killing of al-Qaida Smuggler in Syria was Joint Syrian, U.S. Effort
By RICHARD SALE` (Middle East Times Intelligence Correspondent) Nov. 21 2:04 EST
In spite of much angry public protest in Damascus, last months killing of top al-Qaida operative Abu Ghadiya, was in fact a joint operation between U.S. Special Forces in Iraq and Syrian intelligence, according to former and serving U.S. intelligence officials.
Egypt Opposition Claims Victory in Battle of Gas Exports to Israel
By JOSEPH MAYTON (Middle East Times) Nov. 21 1:09 EST
CAIRO -- Egyptian opposition groups have cheered a victory in their ongoing fight to stop the flow of gas to Israel. Yet, despite a court decision that said Egypts 15-year contract with the Jewish state was improperly agreed because it had not been approved by parliament, supplies continue to arrive in Israel.
EDITORIAL
Will Saudis Jump In to Buy U.S. Automakers?
By MIDDLE EAST TIMES
Nov. 21 1:11 EST
The plight of the American automakers is dire. At their current depressed stock prices, Ford and General Motors could be bought for less than $10 billion. That means that Saudi Arabia could buy them both for the equivalent of 20 days of its oil production, even with oil down to $50 a barrel.
OPINION
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Reaching out to Jews, Bahrain Posits Model for Regional Cooperation
Bahrain, the little Gulf nation where pluralism has been the exception to the regional hegemonic rule, is learning that the best way for democracy to survive is to replicate it.
How Obama Can Win Middle East Peace
BERLIN -- In looking at how the ascension of Barack Obama to the presidency of the United States could affect the Middle East, I am firmly of the belief that to find the answer one need look no further than the way he ran his stunningly successful campaign. By far, it was the most professional, strategically mapped and brutally well-managed two years that any politician could design, with a potent mix of inspiration and perspiration tapping into the Zeitgeist [spirit of the time].

U.S. RAID, AS TOLD BY INTEL SOURCES: Map shows the location of an American Special Forces raid inside Syria that U.S. officials say was executed with Syrian Intel support but which unintentionally resulted in civilian deaths and the killing of their target. (MCT via Newscom) FULL STORY
LATEST NEWS
  • Headlines From the Arab Press
  • Why is Talking With the Taliban so Difficult?
  • Killing of al-Qaida Smuggler in Syria was Joint Syrian, U.S. Effort
  • Egypt Opposition Claims Victory in Battle of Gas Exports to Israel
  • Reaching out to Jews, Bahrain Posits Model for Regional Cooperation
  • Will Saudis Jump In to Buy U.S. Automakers?
ANALYSIS
Why is Talking With the Taliban so Difficult?
By AZIZ HAKIMI
Nov. 21 1:11 EST
KABUL -- Afghan President Hamid Karzai has offered to provide security for the Talibans reclusive leader, Mullah Omar, if he agrees to peace talks. Karzai made the offer despite the multi-million dollar bounty offered for the militant leaders capture by the United States. However, this offer was almost immediately rejected by the Taliban whose spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid said they felt secure in Afghanistan and did not need the protection offered by Karzai.
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INTERNATIONAL
  • Headlines From the Arab Press
  • Why is Talking With the Taliban so Difficult?
  • Killing of al-Qaida Smuggler in Syria was Joint Syrian, U.S. Effort
  • Egypt Opposition Claims Victory in Battle of Gas Exports to Israel
POLITICS
  • Security firms told they lose immunity in Iraq: official
  • Somali pirates demand 25 million dollars for Saudi oil tanker
  • Rice, Kadhafi's son discuss US-Libya ties, human rights
  • British FM lauds Saudi efforts on Mideast peace
SECURITY
  • Iraq Press Roundup
  • U.S.-Iraqi pact needs changes, Sunni says
  • Turkey, U.S., Iraq agree on PKK actions
  • Iraq has a 'duty' to protect Christians
BUSINESS
EDITORIAL
  • Will Saudis Jump In to Buy U.S. Automakers?
  • Time for Strong-Arm Tactics in Fighting Piracy
  • Unleashing Israel's Doves
  • The Wind of Change Has Started to Blow
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MOST POPULAR
  • Israel Bans International Media from Gaza, Arrests Human Rights Activists
  • Analysis: Chevron Nigeria shuts down
  • World Scrambles for Solutions to Somalia Piracy
  • The Financial Crisis Seen Through a Global Lens
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  • Killing of al-Qaida Smuggler in Syria was Joint Syrian, U.S. Effort
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Headlines From the Arab Press
By SANA ABDALLAH (Middle East Times) November 21, 2008 6:03 EST

Ash-Sharq al-Awsat (LONDON/SAUDI ARABIA): Pirates on Saudi Tanker: 25 Hijackers on Ship – One of the pirates on the Saudi Sirius Star supertanker, calling himself Jamei Adam, told ash-Sharq al-Awsat in a satellite telephone call, through an interpreter, that 40 hijackers had seized the ship, and that 25 armed men remain onboard while negotiations continue.

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