Political Science as Incomprehensible Rubbish 12, May 2009
Posted by thegulfblog.com in Random.Tags: Jargon, Political Science
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Critical social constructivism can be distinguished from conventional social constructivism (and neoliberalism) through its anti-essentialist ontology and qualified-foundationalist epistemology, the use of post-structuralist approaches, and a concern with “omitted variable bias” in mainstream international relations (IR) theorizing, for example, mass publics in terms of “levels-of-analysis” and the consideration of “identity” as a driver of foreign policy. These characteristics underpin the approach used in this article, which support alternative findings to the “neo-neo” story of the drivers of Irish neutrality.*
Huh?
What is worse is that the author has chosen to write this way. It is a clear and conscious choice to write this jargon-laden, turgid and near-indecipherable type of paragraph. It just needn’t be this way. Furthermore, making paragraphs as long as this and stretching the English language as far as possible to make them as hard as possible to understand, utterly interrupts the reader’s flow and ability to place the ideas into context. The sense of the overall article is lost amid a growing red mist of frustration, burgeoning hatred and dark thoughts.
…
* (A paragraph taken from an article from a leading political science journal. Need I say that it is NOT written by this author: I am most certainly not trying to plagiarize and take credit…)
Iranian cartoon 12, May 2009
Posted by thegulfblog.com in Iran.Tags: Gholamhossein Elham, Iran, Iranian cartoon, Nikahang Kowsar, Radio Free Europe
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Iranian cartoonist Nikahang Kowsar shows government spokesman Gholamhossein Elham assuring President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, “The opinion polls show us far above everyone else!”
Cartoon taken from Radio Free Europe’s montage of satirical humour across Asia.
UAE Sheikh held over torture video 12, May 2009
Posted by thegulfblog.com in American ME Relations, The Emirates.Tags: Abu Dhabi, New York Times, Sheikh Issa, Torture video, UAE torture
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According to Robert Worth at the NTY, Sheikh Issa Al Nayhan, the half-brother of the ruler of Abu Dhabi, has been detained under house arrest, following the release of the video of him clearly leading the 45 minute torture of an Afghan grain dealer. This comes 11 months after the authorities had been notified of the tape’s existence and thanks to the release of the tape on ABC news in the US. So far, this incident has caused the US to halt its nuclear deal with Abu Dhabi.
The Spread of Wahhabism 12, May 2009
Posted by thegulfblog.com in Saudi Arabia, Yemen.Tags: Coffeehouse, Saudi Arabia, Ulrich, Wahhabi, Wahhabism, Yemen
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Here’s a link to a fascinating post by US Professor Brian Ulrich on his excellent blog Brian’s Coffeehouse. He quotes from a book on tribal order in Yemen on the odd reasons that lie behind the spread of Wahhabism in what one might assume to be areas where it would not penetrate.
One of the remarkable features of the Sunni-Wahhabi movement was that it flourished in the birthplace and heartlands of Zaydi-Shi’ism. This was largely because it tapped a hitherto dormant resentment of key tenets of Zaydi doctrine still manifest there – especially the sayyid claim to religious authority and social superiority on the grounds of religious descent, which Wahhabis felt contravened Islamic ideals by promoting inequality.
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The most public and active converts to Wahhabism in Razih were shibab (young men -ed.) from some qabili and most ‘butcher’ families (lower states -ed.). These young men, who were struggling to find work and marriage payments, and were traditionally subordinate to their elders and ‘betters,’ were attracted to Islah (which they equated with Wahhabism) by its welfare program, and to Wahhabism by its egalitarianism. They credited their education for their conversion. In contrast to their mostly illiterate fathers, who had depended on religious specialists for guidance, they had attended the first secondary schools (which opened in Razih in the 1980s), and had studied the Sunni texts then flooding Yemen and formed their own opinions…
Royal visit for opening of LNG terminal 12, May 2009
Posted by thegulfblog.com in LNG, Qatar.Tags: BBC, Liquified Natural Gas, LNG, Qatar, Royal family, UK
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Members of the British and Qatari royal families will visit South Wales to celebrate the opening last month of a new Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) terminal. Eventually, it is expected that the UK will receive up to 20% of its gas needs from Qatar via South Hook and Port Talbot in Wales. In an excellent summary, the key paragraph from the BBC states that:
The UK is now the world’s fastest growing market for imported gas and now has a direct link with Qatar, the world’s biggest LNG exporter.
The Gulf between Arabs and Persians 12, May 2009
Posted by thegulfblog.com in Iran, Middle East.Tags: Arabian Gulf, Egypt, Iran, Islamic Solidarity Games, Nasser, Persian Gulf, Radio Free Europe, Saudi Arabia
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Just for a change, history is repeating itself in the Middle East. In the run-up to the 2006 Asian Olympics in Qatar, a row erupted between the Emir of Qatar, Hamad Al Thani, and President Ahmadinejad of Iran over the name of the water separating the two countries. At a press conference, Al Thani called it the Arabian Gulf to which Ahmadinejad fired back that it is and always has been the Persian Gulf. Cue an international spat with the Iranian delegation threatening to withdraw their participation from the games. Whilst Iran did eventually attend the games, rancour remained.
Today, exactly the same incident is brewing, though this time between Saudi Arabia and Iran over the Islamic Solidarity Games to be held in cities across Iran in October this year. Radio Free Europe reports that Saudi authorities reacted predictably angrily when Iran’s promotional material referred to the body of water as the Persian Gulf. After Saudi’s threat to pull out unless it was changed to the Arabian Gulf or just the Gulf, Iran has “declared the games over.”
In this case, not only is there the depressing irony that the Islamic Solidarity Games are leading to yet more intra-Islamic division, but that, for once, Iran has international law and custom on its side. Not only does the UN officially sanction the term Persian Gulf but it has been in use for quite literally thousands of years, going back to Ancient Greece. The term Arabian Gulf only emerged from the 1960s with the growth of Arab nationalism and the relative decline of Persia/Iran as a power, not to mention that fact that historically the Arabian Gulf was often used to refer to the Red Sea.
One of the ways that Iran has tried to fight its corner is by monopolizing the first place on a Google search for ‘Arabian Gulf’ which will return a page with a mock ‘broken’ webpage titled ‘The Gulf you are looking for does not exist. Please try Persian Gulf.’ Despite this levity, this issue reflects far deeper and entrenched issues to do with the mantle of leadership in the Islamic world. In recent times, Nasser’s pan-Arabism and Egypt’s profound cultural influences claimed this title until the ignominious and catastrophic 1967 defeat to the Israelis. Since then Iran and Saudi Arabia have been the principle contenders. Saudi Arabia used its financial largess post-1967 to bail out Egypt, Syria and Jordan and firmly establish its place at the top. Since then it has used the soft power of Islam’s two holiest places (Mecca and Medina) to establish, augment and propagate itself as a leader of the Islamic community.
However, Iran’s 1979 Revolution endowed it with pious revolutionary zeal, directly challenging Saudi on an Islamic front. Saudi replied to this by further expanding its funding of Wahhabi schools and teaching throughout the Arab world and beyond, most notably on Iran’s doorstep in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Additionally, Saudi funded the Mujahedeen effort do ‘defend Islam’ against the Godless Soviets in Afghanistan after the invasion in 1979. These tactics offset their traditional, conservative reputation to some degree, by placing Saudi at the vanguard of Islam’s defences, whilst also inadvertently sowing the seeds for 9/11. Since this momentous day, Saudi has come under pressure to own-up to its more radical elements and reform its arcane structures and philosophies. Neither of these things is very chic. Therefore, the Iranians, with their anti-Western stance and pursuit of nuclear weapons – the ultimate symbol of a macho-leader country – are clearly currying more favour on the Arab street than Saudi. Add to this the implosion of Iraq, taking away one of Iran’s traditional enemies and bulwarks, and Iran finds itself less constricted and able to exert more influence regionally.
The naming of the water separating these two antagonistic rivals, therefore, is a question of pride, machismo and reputation. Neither can give in. Saudi’s somewhat conciliatory and practical suggestion of just calling it ‘the Gulf’ is as near to a resolution as can hoped to be achieved. Unless Iran acquiesce to this suggestion – which does not appear likely – there is no end in sight for this perennially divisive issue.