The army is back Now is not the first time that the army has ruled Egypt, writes Salah Eissa
The end of change from abroad The great Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions, and the disasters in Iraq and Afghanistan, show change cannot be forced from outside, but can only come from inside, writes Azmi Ashour
National consensus candidate needed Historical experience shows that massive social transformations can be hard to navigate successfully. To help that process along, Egypt needs an interim president, writes Abdel-Moneim Said
Is there a school for tyrants? Falling dictators in the region follow the same brutish tactics as if the outcome will be different when it comes to their turn, writes Nader Fergany
The change we still need While Washington publicly lauds democracy and rights, in relation to the Arab world the same old biases live on, writes James Zogby
Echoes of Tahrir Square Across the region, Western powers are finding their narrow-minded alliances with autocratic regimes challenged, writes Ayman El-Amir
See you in September Yet another of the Palestinian Authority's meaningless deadlines, irks Ramzy Baroud
Democracy US-style Egypt's pro-democracy movement was greeted in Washington by scheming and second-guessing, observes James Petras
|