#arabs

2025-11-21

@nourgaza @aral @fabio it is obvious that #egypt is not helping enough or those with #arabs with the #bigoil money

MusiqueNow :pride: ✡️ 🇵🇸 :anarchismhebrew:MusiqueNow@todon.eu
2025-11-19

m.youtube.com/watch?v=7omH6wOA

Some scumbag #farright #GOP U.S. candidate called #AnthonyHudson organised an #Islamophobic hate-march through #Dearborn #Michigan, a safe district for #Muslims and #Arabs

So far, all I saw was normie news covering the story.

#farright #extrêmedroite #NaziUSA

تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-11-13

المركز الرعويّ الكاثوليكيّ في مسقط… علامة احترام التنوّع الدينيّ

lemmy.ml/post/38922130

נאריש זשלאָב מענטשdukepaaron@babka.social
2025-11-10

"The #Jewish population is now nonexistent, but for thousands of years the #Jews of #Libya lived under the rule of the #Greeks, #Romans, #OttomanEmpire, #Italian, #British and #Arabs. In 1911, they made up roughly 4% of the #Libyan population. In 1938, “race protection laws” banned Jews from sending their children to school, working in skilled professions or intermarrying. Later the community was divided and sent to concentration camps across #Europe and #NorthAfrica.

In the years following World War II, the remaining Libyan Jews were forced to emigrate, leaving just 100 in 1969 and none at all by 2004. Many went to #Israel and many to #Rome, adding to the spread and diversity of Libyan and North African Jewish #cooking. Today we enjoy such dishes as #mafrum (stuffed #potatoes), #couscous and #chraime (a spicy #fish #stew). Learning about these #foods helps us to understand our people."

jweekly.com/2025/11/10/this-li

تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-11-08

الحروب الصليبية: البذرة الأولى لعصر النهضة

lemmy.ml/post/38682660

تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-11-07

المدوان | مؤامرة الموساد لتهجير يهود العراق: كيف نفذت عملية "عزرا ونحميا"؟ وما علاقة تفجيرات بغداد؟

lemmy.ml/post/38622940

Nathaniel GregoryFaithslayer202
2025-11-01
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-10-21
Two Hamas members during the handover of Israeli hostages in Deir al-Balah in Gaza last week, with a crowd watching.
2025-10-19

@rchusid it was all in the plan. #israel can’t be trusted by their word or agreement . They Will violated it sooner or later and blame always the other side. There plan is a great Israël with no #palestians Let this a warning. When palestians are driffing away from #gaza en #westbank the #arabs or palestians living within #israel are being deported too. #palestine

تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-10-18

المُخبر الاقتصادي+ | كيف تدفع الصين صناعة السيارات الألمانية نحو الانهيار بسرعة؟

lemmy.ml/post/37726587

The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-10-14

‘A Big Day’: How the U.S. and the Arab World Teamed Up to Seal the Gaza Deal

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nyti

President Trump and other leaders gathered on Monday in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, where mediators successfully pushed for a deal between Hamas and Israel the previous week.
تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-10-14

أوهام الإستقلال بثلاثة وعود كاذبة

lemmy.ml/post/37530429

تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-10-12

مصطفى البرغوثي: الشعب الفلسطيني أجبر نتنياهو على إعادة رسم خرائطه وما نشهده في غزة الآن ملحمة عظيمة

lemmy.ml/post/37425464

2025-10-11
تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-10-10

العرب بلا أولاد؟

lemmy.ml/post/37326839

2025-10-09

The Accidental Pact: How A Missile Strike On Qatar Redefined US Regional Strategy

The Accidental Pact: How A Missile Strike On Qatar Redefined US Regional Strategy

By Uriel Araujo

Trump’s unprecedented military guarantee to Qatar caught analysts off guard. What began as a reactive move to an Israeli strike could now reshape US relations with the Gulf and signal a historic recalibration of its Israel-first approach.

The US has become, in effect, a military guarantor for Qatar. With Trump’s unprecedented Executive Order of September 29, 2025, Washington now “shall regard any armed attack on the territory, sovereignty, or critical infrastructure” of Qatar as a threat to the US, pledging to respond with “military” measures, “if necessary”.

For the first time, with the exception of NATO’s Turkey, the US has formally committed to the defence of a regional partner in the Middle East (not Israel).

Expert Bilal Y. Saab argues that the move is “accidental” in the sense that it appears to have been rushed, even sloppy — but it is no less consequential for being so. The timing, indeed, suggests this military guarantee is less the culmination of long strategic planning, and more a reactive wager — a bold recalibration of US posture toward Qatar and, by extension, the Gulf.

I have long been writing about Qatar’s geopolitical relevance as a kind of magnified “small state” actor, so to speak — a diplomatic playmaker in a volatile region. In May I argued that Trump’s Gulf tour (Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE) — notably excluding Israel — signalled a deliberate attempt to rebalance the intricate enough US-Israel relationship. Back then, I observed that while Trump’s gestures in the Gulf appeared transactional, they also served to subtly remind even Washington’s closest ally (Israel) that it cannot act unchecked.

The Gulf states, with their financial heft and mediation roles (especially in Gaza and sometimes even Ukraine), arguably offer more immediacy and leverage to Trump’s vision than Israel sometimes does. In that light, Qatar’s elevation to de facto protectorate status may be the logical next step in a broader pivot.

To be sure, Qatar is no newcomer to regional behind-the-scenes diplomacy. Already in 2021 I chronicled how the Qatari authorities in Doha, even during the Gulf blockade (2017–2021), maintained back-channels to Iran and Turkey, and later brokered reconciliations between the Gulf states themselves. Qatar’s ability to straddle Riyadh and Tehran, Ankara and Washington, is part of its diplomatic capital. In short, Qatar’ mediation portfolio has earned it outsized influence.

So, what explains Trump’s unprecedented guarantee? Several interlocking dynamics are at play, and the move cannot be reduced to theatrical one-upmanship.

First, the immediate trigger was clearly Israel’s September 9 missile strike on Doha, targeting Hamas operatives during ceasefire talks. The attack killed a Qatari security officer and jolted the diplomatic equilibrium. Netanyahu eventually apologized — urged so by Trump — with a phone call to Qatari Prime Minister bin Abdulrahman. But that was not enough. In short order, Trump signed the executive order, anchoring the apology in power. The guarantee both shores up Qatar’s mediation role (which the White House explicitly supports in the text) and deters Israel from repeat strikes against the Arab country.

Second, this move is emblematic of Trump’s Gulf tilt and his recalibration of Washington’s regional assumptions, especially regarding a reordering of the US–Israel axis. By empowering Qatar so overtly, Trump signals that Gulf states can secure more direct reciprocity from Washington than Israel might expect — a blunt message, but one consistent with his transactional foreign-policy mindset. The calculus goes: if Qatar mediates Gaza, Russia and Ukraine, even Iran channels, then binding it militarily ensures sustained alignment. This is underreported in most commentaries, but thus far the Qatari guarantee works as both shield and leash, so to speak.

Third, it is also a bet on deterrence as diplomacy. By elevating Qatar’s status through formalized defence guarantees, the US seeks to generate risk for any state considering strikes on Doha. That said, Saab’s critique deserves attention: a presidential Executive Order is easily reversible; it lacks congressional buy-in; and it arguably does not really commit the US in practice. Under scrutiny, the credibility of such a guarantee is thus questionable. If Israel bombs again, will the US confront it? If Iran or its proxies attack Doha, will Trump risk American lives? The absence of mutual obligations in the text is a striking omission too.

Fourth, this may be a signal to other Gulf powers eyeing guarantees. Saudi Arabia, in particular, has long sought a US mutual defence pact, especially in connection with normalization with Israel. Yet somehow Qatar got the prize first. Can Washington afford formal commitments to multiple Gulf states? That would be a recipe for strategic overstretch. Be as it may, Qatar becomes the test case in a way — the barometer for whether the US is ready to anchor regional security rather than outsource it.

At bottom, this Trump guarantee does reflect a broader shift: the Gulf has arguably become the centre of gravity in Middle East geopolitics, and not just Israel. The United States now seeks to anchor itself more deeply in regional intermediation networks — and it would appear that little old Qatar, ever graceful amid turbulence, is its chosen vehicle.

Yet history reminds us: power is not just declared in paper, but enforced in presence. For this guarantee to be really more than a rhetorical flourish, Washington would need to translate words into posture: joint exercises, missile defences, etc.

In the end, one should neither dismiss the surprise guarantee as impulsive theatre, nor accept it at face value as a solid treaty. Rather (as is the case with so many other things pertaining to Trump) one can see it as a bold gamble.

In this scenario, this moment  could mark the beginning of a truly new US-Gulf bargain: Qatar as military partner, mediator, and semi-shield — with Washington more tightly bound than ever in the Gulf chessboard. One should also expect further complications arising from an America-Israeli relationship that today is more complex than ever.

Uriel Araujo, Anthropology PhD, is a social scientist specializing in ethnic and religious conflicts, with extensive research on geopolitical dynamics and cultural interactions.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Voice of East.

7 Courses in 1 – Diploma in Business Management

#arabs #donaldTrump #geopolitics #iran #israel #middleEast #qatar #saudiArabia #turkey #uae #usa

تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-10-08

Omar Yaghi, a Palestinian refugee, wins Nobel Prize in Chemistry

lemmy.ml/post/37258158

تحريرها كلها ممكنPanArab@lemmy.ml
2025-10-06

لماذا يتدخل الغرب في العالم العربي؟ | د.روي كاساغراندا | بودكاست بدون ورق

lemmy.ml/post/37152229

2025-10-01

Tomorrow at #UVIC #Cinecenta.

cinecenta.com/calendar/aishas-

Aisha’s Story
October 2 at 7:00 pm
Regular Passes Not Accepted – All Seats $8.00.

Aisha Azzam and her husband started their family grain mill in Baqa’a refugee camp, Jordan, 35 years ago. She treasures her role in safeguarding culture by milling the wheat and herbs essential to Palestinian cuisine and passing on her knowledge to the next generation. Through food, Aisha traces the story of Palestinian displacement and rebuilding family and community in a refugee camp. Harvesting, milling, cooking, and feasts ground the film’s arc of displacement, longing, and resistance. In Aisha’s words, “Food is what keeps us together as Palestinians.”

#Filmmakers in attendance – Q&A to follow #FilmScreening with #Palestinian guest.

Aisha’s Story intimately explores the loss, beauty, and steadfastness that define Palestinian lives.

Best Feature #Documentary – Toronto International Women’s Film Festival
Offical Selection: #HotDocs & #DOXA

#BIPOC #Decolonization #FreePalestine #FeedPalestine #MiddleEast #DocFilms #CulturalConnections #Arabs #Muslim #HumanRights #Resilience #Survivors #StopGenocide #Refugees #Diaspora #Resistance #VictoriaBC #YYJFilm #VancouverIsland #VanIsle #DecolonizeYourMind #ColonizerCrimes #CrimesAgainstHumanity

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