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July 24, 2012

In-depth

As Syria Teeters, So Do Decades-Old Assumptions About the Middle East

The conflict is testing the brittle bonds of a national identity in states carved out of old Ottoman provinces at the end of World War I, writes Tony Karon in TIME

A revolutionary victory in Syria would certainly embolden those same Iraqi insurgents who lost Iraq’s civil war, but have never reconciled themselves with Shi‘ite power in Baghdad. There are growing signs of the Syrian conflict spilling also into Lebanon, whose own sectarian fault lines are intimately connected with those across the border.

Anti-Semitism: no longer big news

Martin Bright of the Spectator examines the way in which the media reports on attacks on Israeli and Jews around the world.

It is interesting to compare the coverage of the Bulgarian atrocity compared, say, to the blanket front pages devoted to the Batman massacre in Colorado. There is no hierarchy of suffering for the victims’ families. But there is no comparison in global geopolitical terms between an act carried out by a lone psychopath and a terrorist attack on Israeli citizens on foreign territory.

b>Daily Digest

  • Times of Israel: Tourism minister says Bulgarians foiled terror plot against Israelis months ago

  • Haaretz: Israeli negotiator: Social protest affected Netanyahu’s decision on Shalit deal

  • Jerusalem Post: Liberman: Syrian rebels rejected Israeli assistance

  • Ynet: Rebels: Assad moved chemical weapons to borders

  • New York Times: Syria Threatens Chemical Attack on Foreign Force

  • Washington Post: The IOC’s missed chance to honor Munich victims

  • Wall Street Journal: EU Hits Syria With Fresh Sanctions

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