Amir Taheri
Amir Taheri was the executive editor-in-chief of the daily Kayhan in Iran from 1972 to 1979. He has worked at or written for innumerable publications, published eleven books, and has been a columnist for Asharq Al-Awsat since 1987

Hamas and Israel: What Next?

“The Middle East has never been quieter than this in the past two decades.” This is how Jake Sullivan, President Joe Biden’s National Security advisor boasted about the administration’s claimed successes in “advancing the cause of peace” in a region that hasn’t enjoyed it for more than 100 years. …

Immigration; Europe’s New Wedge Issue

This could lead to the dissolution of the European Union!" The " this" in Josipi Borel's jeremiad is the issue of immigration which the man in charge of the union's foreign policy identifies as an existential threat. Immigration is one of those wedge issues designed to split the electorate into…

From Oligarchs to Plutocrats

By now anyone interested in international politics knows who the oligarchs are. They are super-rich individuals who, by taking advantage of special political circumstances, have amassed big fortunes, often undeservedly, as a trampoline for political influence. The breed is most visible in post…

Africa: Carving the Golden Goose

“Reset!” That was the magic word that US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken used in his first visit to Arica with the message that “years of neglect” under the Trump administration were over and that the Biden presidency would see a new golden dawn in US relations with the turbulent continent. At…

Iran: Presenting a New Image

The “tar baby” is the second of the Uncle Remus tales published in the US in 1881. In it the evil “Bre’er” fox conjures a doll made of tar and turpentine with which to entrap the “Bre’er Rabbit”, the more the victim tries to shake himself free the more entangled he becomes. Several recent events…

Democracy and the Crisis of Authority

Dreaming of freedom in his prison cell in Chateau d’If, Edmond Dantes the hero of Alexandre Dumas’ 1844 novel “The Count of Montecristo” dreams of the nearby port of Marseilles as a haven of peace and freedom. Two centuries later, Dantes might have revised his dream as France’s second largest city…

Syria: Orphan in News Headlines

“Are you there? “This was a question shot at me from a Syrian Twitter acquaintance the other day, followed by a stark reminder: «Hi there! The war in Syria isn’t over!” For years, the sender of the message had informed me and doubtless many others of what was going on in his war-struck homeland…

Brexit: Lottery as Politics

“Brexit has failed!” This is what Nigel Farage, the sulfurous politician who was the cheerleader for Britain leaving the European Union said in a television interview last week. A day later it was the turn of former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the man who railroaded Brexit through the…

The We’ve Got to Do Something Syndrome

Is the Sahel region in West Africa becoming a new hub for international terrorism, as the badlands of Afghanistan were almost three decades ago? Last week, the question forced its way into global policymakers' circles with the military coup in Niamey, the capital of Niger, an impoverished state…

The Left: What Is Left of It?

In 1983 when a hitherto little-noticed party won 27 percent of the votes in the Austrian general election almost the political elite in Europe was up in arms, warning about “mortal danger for democracy”. The Future of Austria Party’s leader, one Jorg Haider was even baptized the “new Hitler”…