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Previously in JPost UpFront Section
  • 05.11.2004 - PICKING UP THE PIECES
  • 29.10.2004 - The new allies
  • 22.10.2004 - The Beduin threat
  • 15.10.2004 - The morning after
  • 08.10.2004 - The other Jewish state
  • 01.10.2004 - Spirited away
  • 24.09.2004 - Sins of 5764
  • 15.09.2004 - Inside the Iraqi insurgency
  • 10.09.2004 - Ariel Sharon's bottom line
  • 03.09.2004 - Who is this man?
  • 27.08.2004 - A nation in overdraft
  • 20.08.2004 - The new haredim
  • 13.08.2004 - Is Bibi ready?
  • 06.08.2004 - Conversations with my killer
  • 30.07.2004 - Danced all night
  • 23.07.2004 - Guns over Gaza
  • 16.07.2004 - The decline of shame
  • 09.07.2004 - After Mubarak
  • 02.07.2004 - New day in Iraq
  • 18.06.2004 - Key to destruction
  • 11.06.2004 - To divide a city
  • 04.06.2004 - Why can't anyone lead the right?
  • 28.05.2004 - Under the fire
  • 21.05.2004 - Prophet of doom
  • IN THIS ISSUE: Bret Stephens · Amotz Asa-El · Saul Singer · Khaled Abu Toameh Douglas Davis · Pinchas Landau · Mac Owens · Martin van Creveld review

    2003 IN REVIEW

    BRET STEPHENS: Europe and the US: Lost in translation
    In today's world, Americans are the actors and Europeans the acted-upon

    SAUL SINGER: A momentous year
    George Bush can already claim to have impacted history more than most other contemporary leaders

    AMOTZ ASA-EL: Crossing the Rubicon
    For better or for worse, Ariel Sharon has unleashed historic changes in 2003

    KHALED ABU TOAMEH: Back in business
    Having withstood an assault by America and Europe, Yasser Arafat can look back on 2003 fondly

    DOUGLAS DAVIS: Where has all the teflon gone?
    A suddenly mortal Tony Blair has come to face charges that he sold Labor's soul for a mess of pottage

    MACKUBIN THOMAS OWENS: The American way of war
    Stunning though it was, the US military's campaign in Iraq did not represent a complete break with the past

    MARTIN VAN CREVELD: For whom the death-bell tolls
    A vicious cycle is under way from which there is probably no exit until the Americans finally leave Iraq as they did Vietnam

    PINCHAS LANDAU: Light at the end of the tunnel
    After getting off to a bad start, 2003 turned out to be the first good year this century for the global economy

  • HERB KEINON, GIL HOFFMAN & NINA GILBERT: Jerusalem
  • JANINE ZACHARIA: Washington
  • MELISSA RADLER: Diaspora
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