Biblioteca Biblioteca
Buscar

Kurdipedia son las mayores fuentes de información kurda!


Search Options





Búsqueda Avanzada      Teclado


Buscar
Búsqueda Avanzada
Biblioteca
Nombres Kurdos
Cronología de los hechos
Fuentes
Historia
Colecciones usuario
Actividades
Buscar Ayuda?
Publicación
Video
Clasificaciones
Elemento Random!
Enviar
Enviar artículo
Enviar imagen
Survey
Su opinion
Contacto
¿Qué tipo de información necesitamos!
Normas
Términos de uso
Calidad de artículo
Instrumentos
Acerca
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artículos nosotros!
Añadir Kurdipedia a su sitio web
Añadir / Eliminar Email
Estadísticas de visitantes
Estadísticas de artículos
Fuentes Convertidor
Calendarios Convertidor
Lenguas y dialectos de las páginas
Teclado
Enlaces útiles
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
Idiomas
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی
Kurmancî
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Français
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Fins
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Mi cuenta
Registrarse
Membresía!
Olvidó su contraseña?
Buscar Enviar Instrumentos Idiomas Mi cuenta
Búsqueda Avanzada
Biblioteca
Nombres Kurdos
Cronología de los hechos
Fuentes
Historia
Colecciones usuario
Actividades
Buscar Ayuda?
Publicación
Video
Clasificaciones
Elemento Random!
Enviar artículo
Enviar imagen
Survey
Su opinion
Contacto
¿Qué tipo de información necesitamos!
Normas
Términos de uso
Calidad de artículo
Acerca
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artículos nosotros!
Añadir Kurdipedia a su sitio web
Añadir / Eliminar Email
Estadísticas de visitantes
Estadísticas de artículos
Fuentes Convertidor
Calendarios Convertidor
Lenguas y dialectos de las páginas
Teclado
Enlaces útiles
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی
Kurmancî
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Français
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Fins
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Registrarse
Membresía!
Olvidó su contraseña?
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 Acerca
 Elemento Random!
 Términos de uso
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 Su opinion
 Colecciones usuario
 Cronología de los hechos
 Actividades - Kurdipedia
 Ayudar
Nuevo elemento
Lugares
Erzurum
17-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Zara
08-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Darin Zanyar
07-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Ahmet Kaya
05-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Ziryab
20-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Ibn Khallikan
20-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Al Jazarí
19-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Hejar
15-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Nezamí Ganyaví
12-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Nalî
12-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Estadística
Artículos
  537,056
Imágenes
  109,675
Libros
  20,246
Archivos relacionados
  103,931
Video
  1,535
Idioma
کوردیی ناوەڕاست - Central Kurdish 
305,764
Kurmancî - Upper Kurdish (Latin) 
89,947
هەورامی - Kurdish Hawrami 
65,998
عربي - Arabic 
30,673
کرمانجی - Upper Kurdish (Arami) 
18,081
فارسی - Farsi 
9,731
English - English 
7,554
Türkçe - Turkish 
3,667
لوڕی - Kurdish Luri 
1,690
Deutsch - German 
1,686
Pусский - Russian 
1,140
Français - French 
348
Nederlands - Dutch 
130
Zazakî - Kurdish Zazaki 
91
Svenska - Swedish 
72
Español - Spanish 
55
Polski - Polish 
55
Հայերեն - Armenian 
52
Italiano - Italian 
52
لەکی - Kurdish Laki 
37
Azərbaycanca - Azerbaijani 
27
日本人 - Japanese 
21
中国的 - Chinese 
20
Norsk - Norwegian 
18
Ελληνική - Greek 
16
עברית - Hebrew 
16
Fins - Finnish 
12
Português - Portuguese 
10
Тоҷикӣ - Tajik 
9
Ozbek - Uzbek 
7
Esperanto - Esperanto 
6
Catalana - Catalana 
6
Čeština - Czech 
5
ქართველი - Georgian 
5
Srpski - Serbian 
4
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي -  
3
Hrvatski - Croatian 
3
балгарская - Bulgarian 
2
हिन्दी - Hindi 
2
Lietuvių - Lithuanian 
2
қазақ - Kazakh 
1
Cebuano - Cebuano 
1
ترکمانی - Turkman (Arami Script) 
1
Grupo
Español
Artículos 
18
Biografía 
16
Biblioteca 
12
Lugares 
3
Partidos y Organizaciones 
2
Mártires 
2
Documentos 
2
Repositorio
MP3 
324
PDF 
31,323
MP4 
2,531
IMG 
201,063
∑   Total 
235,241
Búsqueda de contenido
Biografía
Ziryab
Biografía
Ahmet Kaya
Biografía
Darin Zanyar
Biografía
Zara
Mártires
Mahsa Amini
Biden and Mother Nature Have Reshaped the Middle East
Grupo: Artículos | Lenguaje de los artículos: English - English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
Clasificación elemento
Excelente
Muy bueno
Promedio
Pobre
Malo
Añadir a mis colecciones
Escriba su comentario sobre este artículo!
Titel der Geschichte
Metadata
RSS
Búsqueda en Google de imágenes relacionadas con el elemento seleccionado!
Buscar en Google para el artículo seleccionado!
کوردیی ناوەڕاست - Central Kurdish0
Kurmancî - Upper Kurdish (Latin)0
عربي - Arabic0
فارسی - Farsi0
Türkçe - Turkish0
עברית - Hebrew0
Deutsch - German0
Español - Spanish0
Français - French0
Italiano - Italian0
Nederlands - Dutch0
Svenska - Swedish0
Ελληνική - Greek0
Azərbaycanca - Azerbaijani0
Catalana - Catalana0
Čeština - Czech0
Esperanto - Esperanto0
Fins - Finnish0
Hrvatski - Croatian0
Lietuvių - Lithuanian0
Norsk - Norwegian0
Ozbek - Uzbek0
Polski - Polish0
Português - Portuguese0
Pусский - Russian0
Srpski - Serbian0
балгарская - Bulgarian0
қазақ - Kazakh0
Тоҷикӣ - Tajik0
Հայերեն - Armenian0
हिन्दी - Hindi0
ქართველი - Georgian0
中国的 - Chinese0
日本人 - Japanese0

Biden and Mother Nature Have Reshaped the Middle East

Biden and Mother Nature Have Reshaped the Middle East
Thomas L. Friedman
So, I just have one question: Should I point out how President Biden’s withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan is already reshaping Middle East politics — mostly for the better? Or should I wait a few months and not take seriously yet what one Gulf diplomat drolly said to me of the recent festival of Arab-Arab and Arab-Iranian reconciliations: “Love is in the air.”

What the heck, let’s go for it now.

Because something is in the air that is powerfully resetting the pieces on the Middle East chess board — pieces that had been frozen in place for years. The biggest force shifting them was Biden’s decision to pull out of Afghanistan and tell the region: “You’re home alone. If you’re looking for us, we’ll be in the Straits of Taiwan. Write often. Send oil. Bye.”

But a second factor is intensifying the pressure of America’s leaving: Mother Nature, manifesting herself in heat waves, droughts, demographic stresses, long-term falling oil prices and rising Covid-19 cases.

Indeed, I’d argue that we are firmly in a transition from a Middle East shaped by great powers to a Middle East shaped by Mother Nature. And this shift will force every leader to focus more on building ecological resilience to gain legitimacy instead of gaining it through resistance to enemies near and far. We are just at the start of this paradigm shift from resistance to resilience, as this region starts to become too hot, too populated and too water-starved to sustain any quality of life.

More on that in a minute — first, let’s go back to Biden. He was dead right: America’s presence in Afghanistan and tacit security guarantees around the region were both stabilizing and enabling a lot of bad behavior — boycotts, occupations, reckless adventures and brutal interventions.

Our staunch support for traditional allies, whether they were behaving badly or well, encouraged people to reach beyond their grasp, without fear of consequences. I am talking about the Saudi and United Arab Emirates intervention in Yemen and their boycott of Qatar, Turkey’s various machinations in Libya (or against the Kurds in Syria and Iraq), the now-fallen Afghan government’s idiotic refusal to negotiate with the Taliban and Israel’s expansion of settlements deep into the West Bank.
Sign up for the Opinion Today newsletter Get expert analysis of the news and a guide to the big ideas shaping the world every weekday morning. Get it sent to your inbox.

President Barack Obama’s pullback from the region and President Donald Trump’s refusal to retaliate against Iran — after it sent a wave of drones to attack a key Saudi oil facility in 2019 — were the warning signs that America had grown weary of intervening and refereeing in the Middle East’s sectarian wars. Biden just made it official.

And now, well, as the song says: The best part of breaking up is making up!

In recent months Saudi Arabia has begun patching up its broken ties with Iran and Qatar, and shrinking its involvement in Yemen. The U.A.E. has withdrawn from conflicts in Libya and Yemen, and patched its relations with Iran, Qatar and Syria. Iraq has been mediating between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Both the U.A.E. and the Saudis understand that with their U.S. big brother withdrawing, they cannot afford hostilities with a bigger Iran, and the Iranians understand that with their country still under so many sanctions, they need as many openings to the world as they can get. Bahrain and the U.A.E. have built an open relationship with Israel, and Saudi Arabia has built a covert one. Meanwhile, Egypt and Israel are working together to defuse tensions with Hamas in Gaza.

Alas, though, the U.S. pullback has also become a get-out-of-jail-free card for Syria’s long-shunned, Iranian-backed president, Bashar al-Assad, who has been accused of genocide in quashing a revolt by his own people. For the first time in a decade, King Abdullah of Jordan recently took a phone call from Assad. The Jordanian Palace said they “discussed relations between the two brotherly countries.”

Egypt and Jordan want to try to wean Syria and Iraq, the twin pillars of the Arab state system, away from Shiite Iran. Egypt also wants to export its gas to Lebanon, and cash-strapped Jordan wants to re-establish once-lucrative trade ties with Syria. Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. even took their relations with Turkey out of the deep freeze, hoping to bring it back into the regional fold as a Sunni counterweight to Iran.

Iran, though, is probably thinking that the United States, while it will maintain sanctions, has lost any stomach for military action to curb Tehran’s push to enrich enough uranium to become a threshold nuclear weapons state.

“The U.S. is not pulling out entirely, but it is pulling back, and all of its Sunni Arab partners are now acting to protect themselves — and to stabilize the region — in an era when the U.S. will no longer be dominant there,” argued Martin Indyk, a longtime U.S. envoy in the Middle East, whose new book, “Master of the Game: Henry Kissinger and the Art of Middle East Diplomacy,” is a gripping history of how the United States used peacemaking to supplant the Soviet Union as the dominant foreign power in the region. “But the U.S. will still be needed to deter Iran, should it develop a nuclear capability — and to defuse other conflicts.”

But the power to shape this region comes in many forms.

In keeping with the theme of Indyk’s book, I’d argue that just as we once supplanted the Soviets as the dominant shaper in the region, Mother Nature is now supplanting America as the dominant force.

In Mother Nature’s Middle East, leaders will be judged not by how much they resist one another or great powers, but by how much resilience they build for their people and nations at a time when the world will be phasing out fossil fuels, at a time when all the Arab-Muslim states have booming populations under the age of 30 and at a time of intensifying climate change.

The United Nations recently reported that Afghanistan has been hit with the worst drought in more than 30 years. It is crushing farmers, pushing up food prices and putting 18.8 million Afghans — nearly half of the population — into food insecurity. Over to you, Mr. Taliban: You broke it, you own it.

On top of stresses from Covid-19, Iran last summer experienced deadly water riots in its parched southwest — and its climate is predicted to get hotter and drier. Egypt is trying to contend with a rising Mediterranean pushing salty seawater into the irrigation systems of its Nile Delta breadbasket. Egypt and Ethiopia could actually go to war over the water-trapping dam that Ethiopia has built upstream on the Nile.

Israel just signed an agreement to double the freshwater it provides to Jordan, one of the driest countries in the world. And former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu created a firestorm by claiming — crazily and without any facts — that his successor, Naftali Bennett, was being duped because “when he gives King Abdullah water, Abdullah is simultaneously giving oil — to who? To Iran.”

It is the first time I recall Bibi denouncing a rival for giving away not too much land but too much water. A sign of the times.

In fact, there may be a day, very soon, where the United States will need to return to active Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy — not based on land for peace, but sun and fresh water for peace. EcoPeace Middle East, an alliance of Israeli, Palestinian and Jordanian environmentalists, recently put forward just such a strategy called the “Green Blue Deal.”

How would it work? Jordan, with its vast desert areas, has the comparative advantage to produce large amounts of cheap solar electricity to meet its own needs and also to sell to the Israeli and Palestinian grids to “generate the electricity for desalination plants that could provide all three parties abundant fresh water,” Gidon Bromberg, EcoPeace’s Israel director, explained to me.

This kind of ecosystem diplomacy could provide a sustainable way for the United States to re-engage in Mother Nature’s Middle East: All the parties there are ecologically interdependent, but they have unhealthy interdependencies rather than healthy ones. America could become the trusted mediator who forges healthy interdependencies — not as a substitute for an Israeli-Palestinian land-for-peace deal but as the necessary trust-building precursor.

Welcome to the real new Middle East — Mother Nature’s Middle East.[1]

Este artículo ha sido escrito en (English) Lenguaje, haga clic en el icono de para abrir el artículo en el idioma original!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
Este artículo ha sido visitado veces 200
Escriba su comentario sobre este artículo!
HashTag
Fuentes
[1] | English | nytimes.com 26-10-2021
Artículos relacionados: 5
Grupo: Artículos
Lenguaje de los artículos: English
Publication date: 26-10-2021 (3 Año)
Dialecto: Inglés
Publication Type: Born-digital
Technical Metadata
Calidad de artículo: 90%
90%
Añadido por ( هەژار کامەلا ) en 03-03-2024
Este artículo ha sido revisado y publicado por ( زریان سەرچناری ) en 03-03-2024
Este artículo ha actualizado recientemente por ( هەژار کامەلا ) en: 03-03-2024
URL
Este artículo según Kurdipedia de Normas no está terminado todavía!
Este artículo ha sido visitado veces 200
Kurdipedia son las mayores fuentes de información kurda!
Biblioteca
Kurdistán: desmantelando al Estado
Biblioteca
Liberando la vida: la revolución de las mujeres
Artículos
La formación del Kurdistán y la seguridad societal
Biblioteca
Revolución de las mujeres y luchas por la vida ¡Defender Rojava
Biblioteca
Los kurdos en Iraq
Biblioteca
La revolución de Kurdistán y Medio Oriente
Biografía
Abdullah Öcalan
Artículos
​Mohandas Gandhi habla con Abdullah Öcalan ​- Sobre la violencia, la no violencia y el Estado

Actual
Biografía
Ziryab
20-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Ziryab
Biografía
Ahmet Kaya
05-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Ahmet Kaya
Biografía
Darin Zanyar
07-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Darin Zanyar
Biografía
Zara
08-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Zara
Mártires
Mahsa Amini
15-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Mahsa Amini
Nuevo elemento
Lugares
Erzurum
17-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Zara
08-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Darin Zanyar
07-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Ahmet Kaya
05-09-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Ziryab
20-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Ibn Khallikan
20-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Al Jazarí
19-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Hejar
15-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Nezamí Ganyaví
12-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Biografía
Nalî
12-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Estadística
Artículos
  537,056
Imágenes
  109,675
Libros
  20,246
Archivos relacionados
  103,931
Video
  1,535
Idioma
کوردیی ناوەڕاست - Central Kurdish 
305,764
Kurmancî - Upper Kurdish (Latin) 
89,947
هەورامی - Kurdish Hawrami 
65,998
عربي - Arabic 
30,673
کرمانجی - Upper Kurdish (Arami) 
18,081
فارسی - Farsi 
9,731
English - English 
7,554
Türkçe - Turkish 
3,667
لوڕی - Kurdish Luri 
1,690
Deutsch - German 
1,686
Pусский - Russian 
1,140
Français - French 
348
Nederlands - Dutch 
130
Zazakî - Kurdish Zazaki 
91
Svenska - Swedish 
72
Español - Spanish 
55
Polski - Polish 
55
Հայերեն - Armenian 
52
Italiano - Italian 
52
لەکی - Kurdish Laki 
37
Azərbaycanca - Azerbaijani 
27
日本人 - Japanese 
21
中国的 - Chinese 
20
Norsk - Norwegian 
18
Ελληνική - Greek 
16
עברית - Hebrew 
16
Fins - Finnish 
12
Português - Portuguese 
10
Тоҷикӣ - Tajik 
9
Ozbek - Uzbek 
7
Esperanto - Esperanto 
6
Catalana - Catalana 
6
Čeština - Czech 
5
ქართველი - Georgian 
5
Srpski - Serbian 
4
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي -  
3
Hrvatski - Croatian 
3
балгарская - Bulgarian 
2
हिन्दी - Hindi 
2
Lietuvių - Lithuanian 
2
қазақ - Kazakh 
1
Cebuano - Cebuano 
1
ترکمانی - Turkman (Arami Script) 
1
Grupo
Español
Artículos 
18
Biografía 
16
Biblioteca 
12
Lugares 
3
Partidos y Organizaciones 
2
Mártires 
2
Documentos 
2
Repositorio
MP3 
324
PDF 
31,323
MP4 
2,531
IMG 
201,063
∑   Total 
235,241
Búsqueda de contenido
Kurdipedia son las mayores fuentes de información kurda!
Biblioteca
Kurdistán: desmantelando al Estado
Biblioteca
Liberando la vida: la revolución de las mujeres
Artículos
La formación del Kurdistán y la seguridad societal
Biblioteca
Revolución de las mujeres y luchas por la vida ¡Defender Rojava
Biblioteca
Los kurdos en Iraq
Biblioteca
La revolución de Kurdistán y Medio Oriente
Biografía
Abdullah Öcalan
Artículos
​Mohandas Gandhi habla con Abdullah Öcalan ​- Sobre la violencia, la no violencia y el Estado

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.83
| Contacto | CSS3 | HTML5

| Página tiempo de generación: 0.547 segundo!