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  • Turkey's Prime Minister Threatens To Ban Facebook, YouTube

    TURKEY'S PRIME MINISTER THREATENS TO BAN FACEBOOK, YOUTUBE

    Foreign Policy
    March 7 2014

    BY Cortni Kerr

    Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to shut
    down social media sites Facebook and YouTube in response to recent
    wiretap recordings released anonymously over YouTube. The controversial
    recordings, the latest development in Turkey's corruption scandal,
    allegedly incriminate Erdogan and other government officials. In a
    late Thursday ATV broadcast, Erdogan asserted, "We are determined on
    this subject. We will not leave this nation at the mercy of YouTube
    and Facebook," adding that such measures would not take place until
    after March 30 municipal elections. Turkey's President Abdullah Gul
    commented Friday that such a ban is "out of the question." Gul,
    however, added that authorities had the power under a new law
    to block access to certain materials if a person's privacy is
    being violated. Meanwhile, new labor statistics show that Turkey's
    unemployment rate for 2013 increased to 9.7 percent, surpassing the
    government's goal of 9.5 percent. Despite the economic situation and
    recent corruption allegations, a poll released Tuesday reported that
    Erdogan's approval rating rose from its all-time low of 39.4 percent
    in January to 43.5 percent in February.

    Syria

    The Syrian government is expected to miss a major deadline next week
    to destroy its 12 nuclear weapons production facilities. An official
    from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said
    Thursday that none of the facilities had been destroyed yet. In the
    city of Homs, a car bomb exploded in the Armenian district, killing
    at least 15 people and wounding 12 others Thursday. In the south,
    Syrian aircraft launched an attack near the Lebanese border on the
    rebel-held town of Yarboud, where at least 17 rebels were killed in
    fighting on Thursday. Increased Syrian aircraft activity near the
    Israel-Syria border Friday morning prompted the Israeli Air Force
    to scramble fighter jets four times, though it did not result in
    direct confrontation.

    Headlines

    Egypt announced in an online statement Thursday that it was acting in
    solidarity with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain
    by withdrawing its diplomatic envoy from Qatar to "correct the path
    of the Qatari government."

    Egypt's cabinet approved the final draft of a new presidential
    elections law that is expected to pave the way for an official
    announcement on the terms and date of the election.

    Saudi Arabia has formally designated the Muslim Brotherhood as a
    terrorist organization, along with the al-Nusra Front and the Islamic
    State of Iraq and the Levant.

    At least 30 people were killed in a series of bombings in Iraq's
    capital of Baghdad and the southern town of Hilla on Thursday. Gunfire
    killed eight people on Friday in Fallujah, where anti-government
    fighters have held control for more than two months.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Jordan to discuss the
    Israeli-Palestinian peace process with King Abdullah II.

    Arguments and Analysis

    'Break Up in the Gulf: What the GCC Dispute Means for Qatar' (Bilal Y.

    Saab, Foreign Affairs)

    "Should Qatar become friendlier with Iran and Oman, it would signal
    the death of the GCC and herald a new power alignment in the Gulf. It
    would also severely complicate U.S. plans in the Middle East. For
    some time, the United States has encouraged the Arab Gulf States to
    think and act more collectively to enhance Gulf security. But with
    increasing tensions among GCC members, including possible divorces,
    this goal seems increasingly unrealistic. Washington may come to see
    that its Gulf allies will not be able to provide regional security
    anytime soon and, as a result, think twice about plans to reduce the
    U.S. political and military footprint there.

    Qatar's spat with its Saudi and Emirati neighbors also creates
    another policy dilemma for the United States. Washington has strategic
    relations with all three states, which will become difficult to manage
    if they aren't on speaking terms. It is possible that Riyadh and Abu
    Dhabi could even lobby the United States to help shut down money flows
    out of Doha under the guise of counterterrorism. But Washington might
    not be receptive. Qatar hosts the Al Udeid Air Base and the Combined
    Air and Space Operations Center, which coordinated all of the U.S.

    attack and surveillance missions for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    In other words, although the U.S. Treasury Department and State
    Department may show readiness to entertain Saudi and Emirati punitive
    measures against Doha, the Pentagon will probably put the brakes on
    any such plans."

    'Zooming in on Syria: Adapting US Policy to Local Realities' (Faysal
    Itani and Nathaniel Rosenblatt, Atlantic Council)

    "The single-minded US focus on international diplomacy has come at
    the expense of a nuanced and granular understanding of the opposition.

    This has encouraged a reactive approach that has failed to keep pace
    with the evolution of the uprising as it morphed from peaceful protest
    to armed rebellion and, finally, full-blown civil war. Unless the
    United States adopts a more flexible, imaginative, and committed
    approach, Syria will continue its descent into lawlessness and
    terrorism, causing untold suffering for Syrians, threatening
    neighboring countries, and fueling regional sectarian hatred and
    violence.

    For the United States to play any relevant role in facilitating a
    negotiated political transition in Syria, it needs to fundamentally
    alter its framework for understanding and dealing with the uprising, to
    gain a much deeper grasp of the local opposition and its standing among
    the local population, capacity to govern, and ability to coordinate
    and represent Syrians in international fora. Policymakers need to
    evaluate why the opposition has evolved as it did through the stages
    of protest movement, armed insurgency, and long-term civil war.

    This brief takes a micro-view of key moments in the evolution of the
    conflict and shows how moderate trends within the opposition lost
    the upper hand. The authors argue that foreign actors played a role
    in worsening internal divisions among opposition players, empowering
    radical sectarian militias, and thwarting efforts to overthrow the
    regime. Such an analysis offers critical lessons on how the United
    States can more effectively pursue a political transition in Syria."

    -- Cortni Kerr

    ADEM ALTAN/AFP/Getty Images

    http://mideastafrica.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2014/03/07/turkey_s_prime_minister_threatens_to_ban_facebook_ youtube



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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