Muslim Uprisings Open Gates For al Qaeda -- Shaun Waterman, The Washington Times
The recent wave of anti-West demonstrations across the Muslim world and the attack that killed four Americans in Libya have triggered mounting concern among analysts and U.S. officials that al Qaeda is exploiting the chaos that has followed the Arab Spring’s overthrow of secular dictatorships aligned with the United States.
Al Qaeda’s affiliate in North Africa has been linked to the Sept. 11 military-style assault on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, that killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans.
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Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials
Al-Qaeda’s Resurgence -- Max Boot, Commentary
Turkey's President Wants War in Syria. Turks Don't. -- Suzy Hansen, The New Republic
The U.S. election and the price of sitting out Syria -- Christiane Amanpour, CNN & ABC
Benghazi and why words matter -- Will Inboden, Shadow Government/Foreign Policy
Report: Iran Sanctions Have Failed -- Adam Kredo, Washington Free Beacon
Afghanistan: Why America’s Longest War is NOT a Campaign Issue -- Robert Dreyfuss, The Diplomat
Winds of change in Myanmar -- Pavin Chachavalpongpun, Japan Times
A time-honored tradition: Election year and China-bashing -- Washington Post editorial
China’s Nobels -- Larry Siems and Jeffrey Yang, New York Times
The men behind schoolgirl Malala -- Qanta A. Ahmed, Christian Science Monitor
Japanese Politician’s Visit To Shrine Raises Worries -- Martin Fackler, New York Times
Will the World Go to War to Save Mali? -- Ishaan Tharoor, Time
What really happened in Benghazi? -- Dan Murphy, Christian Science Monitor
Mr. Putin’s Gift to Terrorists -- New York Times editorial
Why Europe is floundering -- John Gray, The Guardian
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