Silver Linings In the Middle East

Years ago I spent a lot of time studying the state of US-Cuban relations.  I came to the subject with the optimism that most Americans bring to just about every world problem; surely there was a solution somewhere that moderate people of good will could find.  But the deeper I got into the subject, and […]

Final Post From Jerusalem

It has been an exhausting and exhaustive trip, and I wouldn’t have had it any other way. Once home and on the mend, I will continue to reflect on what I’ve learned anew from my return to this fascinating region, and from meeting with a host of people at the very center of its fate.Until […]

The Palestinian Predicament

It’s been a quiet two days here in Jerusalem — at least for the Mead team.  For the last two days I’ve had to cancel all meetings and visits due to a vicious stomach bug that has kept me close, very close, to my hotel room.  For most of that time I’ve been too miserable […]

The Middle East Peace Industry

George Mitchell (below) has arrived in Jerusalem and the ‘proximity talks’ have started, but it is not at all clear what will come of them.The Middle East peace process is the longest running piece of diplomatic theater on the world stage.  Dating from World War One, the effort to reconcile the aspirations of the Jews […]

More from the Holy Land

More photos from the Holy Land…Detail from the Dome of the Rock.  The tile is extraordinary.  When I was here ten years ago it was still possible to visit inside the mosque where the exquisite collection of beautiful calligraphy containing the anti-Christian passages of the Koran makes a major political and theological statement.The Western Wall […]

Pictures from the Holy Land

It’s been a busy trip, and I’m sorry I haven’t been able to blog more while here; I have a lot to say, however, and hope to get some of it up before my return at week’s end to the temporarily empty Mead Manor. But since a picture is worth a thousand words, I figured […]

It’s A Crisis of Faith Not A Crisis of Stocks

From my hotel balcony here in West Jerusalem, I can see the walls of the Old City, and behind them the steeples and minarets of this city that haunts the imagination of the world.  The religions of Jerusalem have been around a long time, and in their separate ways the faiths and the religious establishments […]

The Lisbon Syndrome

With an agreement over a multi-year $146 billion bailout for Greece, the European Union has, for now, staved off disaster.  Problems remain, the worst being that under EU rules, each contributor country now has the right to accept or reject its share of the burden.  Germany, where the public hates the bailout, is the biggest […]

The Greek Tragedy Unfolds

The news from Greece continues to get worse.  As protests and demonstrations against the new austerity measures break out across the country, the euro was shaken yet again as investors worried about Greece.This time, though, investors aren’t worried about the math; the Greek cabinet has agreed to the latest round of spending cuts and the […]

Summer Note: The Politics of Climategate

An inconvenient goof.

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