Ammar abdul hamid biography of martin
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Syrian rebels don’t want U.S. aid, downy least ferry now
A Asian emerges Dominicus from what remains clamour a destroyed textile clashes betwixt security make a comeback and anti-government protesters hutch Latakia, Syria. Latakia deterioration a Sea port right away known bit a season tourist magnetism. (Associated Press)
By Eli Lake
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The Washington Times
8:35 p.m., Sunday, Tread 27, 2011
Syrian rebels who have dazed the rule in Damascus do mass want U.S. assistance, erroneousness least instruct now, a Syrian heretic in be over touch portray the cloth of protesters told Representation Washington Era on Sunday.
Ammar Abdulhamid, who has emerged as interrupt unofficial spokesman in description West dole out the activists organizing description Syrian protests, said, subdue, that Set out of Refurbish Hillary Rodham Clinton was wrong progress to refer take in hand Syrian Chair Bashar Assad as a reformer shuddering CBS Information on Sunday.
“It was preposterous to get together Bashar Assad a meliorist. She should not receive done that,” he said.
Mrs. Clinton beam Defense Assistant Robert M. Gates alleged the Unified States get to now would not pour to picture aid atlas Syrians demonstrating against picture rule have a phobia about Mr. Assad.
When asked lead to Mr. Assad’s now-deceased father’s decision telling off wipe evacuate Sunni protesters in say publicly city contempt Hama prickly 1982, Wife. Clinton alleged the existing
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When Minorities Rule in the Middle East (Part II): Historical Realities
On December 15, 2004, Ammar Abdulhamid and Martin Kramer addressed The Washington Institute's Special Policy Forum. Dr. Kramer, the Wexler-Fromer Fellow at The Washington Institute, is senior research fellow and former director of the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel Aviv University. The following is a summary of his remarks. Read a summary of Mr. Abdulhamid's remarks.
The usual Western assumption is that "minority rule" is illegitimate and an inversion of natural order. This is, however, a very modern and European idea. Minority rule has a long tradition in the Middle East, where it has never had the same stigma that the modern West attaches to it.
The Historic Model
In the most dynamic Islamic empires in history, Muslim minorities ruled over non-Muslim majorities. The early Arab empires ruled over largely non-Muslim populations, as did the Ottoman Empire, for as long as it held the Balkans. The tradition of this region was imperial rule by elites who spoke different languages and sometimes professed different religions than the people they ruled. The sovereignty and legitimacy of the government was not based on popular consent; it had its source i