Donate
Follow TFF
Facebook-f X-twitter Linkedin-in Tiktok Telegram Weixin Vk
  • Home
  • About us
    • Mission
    • Themes & Programs
    • Who are we?
    • Authors
    • Organization and Identity
    • Editorial Policies and principles
    • Privacy policy
    • FAQs
  • A-L Themes
    • Academic
    • Africa
      • Burundi
      • Horn of Africa
      • Middle East-North Africa
      • North Africa
    • Asia
      • China
      • Cambodia
      • Silk
      • India
      • Japan
      • Myanmar
      • North Korea
      • Pakistan
      • South Korea
      • South India
      • Thailand
      • Xinjiang
    • Cold War – Old and New
    • Democracy in Crisis
    • Development worldwide
    • Dialogue
    • Europe
      • EU Countries Trends
      • EU foreign policies
      • EU security and defence
      • Europe outside EU
      • Refugee crisis
      • Yugoslavia then and now
    • Future world – imagination/real
    • Globalisation – Nationalism
    • Human rights and justice
    • History
    • International law
  • M-Z Theme
    • Militarism (MIMAC)
      • Nato
    • Middle East
      • Afghanistan
      • Arab Spring and after
      • Egypt
      • Georgia
      • Iran
      • Iraq
    • Nordic Region
      • Denmark
      • Finland
      • Sweden
      • Norway
      • Polar
      • Greenland
      • Iceland
    • Nuclearism
      • Nuclear abolition
      • Nuclear dangers
      • Nuclear Free Zones
      • Nuclear possession
      • Nuclear weapons
    • Russia international relations
    • Ukraine
    • United Nations
    • United States – Empire and domestic
    • US Empire
  • Classics
  • Peace
    • Alternative media – peace journalism
    • Alternatives – peace
    • Art and peace
    • EU peace
    • Nobel peace prize
    • Peace – reconciliation
    • Peace and religions
    • Peace and women
    • Peace culture
  • China
    • Silk
    • Xinjiang
  • Europe
    • UE and NATO
    • Europe outside EU
  • Oberg
  • Culture
    • Peace culture
  • World order
    • World order – futures
    • World order/governance
  • Nuclear
    • Nuclearism
    • Nuclear weapons
    • Nuclear abolition
    • Nuclear dangers
    • Nuclear free zones
    • Nuclear possession
  • Cold War
    • Cold War – new
    • Cold War – old and New
    • Cold war
  • Terrorism
    • Terrorism – war on terror
    • War on terror
  • Nonviolence
  • Media
    • Alternative media – peace journalism
    • Media and conflict
    • Media perspectives
    • Omitted media
  • Videos
  • TFF on Substack
  • Home
  • About us
    • Mission
    • Themes & Programs
    • Who are we?
    • Authors
    • Organization and Identity
    • Editorial Policies and principles
    • Privacy policy
    • FAQs
  • A-L Themes
    • Academic
    • Africa
      • Burundi
      • Horn of Africa
      • Middle East-North Africa
      • North Africa
    • Asia
      • China
      • Cambodia
      • Silk
      • India
      • Japan
      • Myanmar
      • North Korea
      • Pakistan
      • South Korea
      • South India
      • Thailand
      • Xinjiang
    • Cold War – Old and New
    • Democracy in Crisis
    • Development worldwide
    • Dialogue
    • Europe
      • EU Countries Trends
      • EU foreign policies
      • EU security and defence
      • Europe outside EU
      • Refugee crisis
      • Yugoslavia then and now
    • Future world – imagination/real
    • Globalisation – Nationalism
    • Human rights and justice
    • History
    • International law
  • M-Z Theme
    • Militarism (MIMAC)
      • Nato
    • Middle East
      • Afghanistan
      • Arab Spring and after
      • Egypt
      • Georgia
      • Iran
      • Iraq
    • Nordic Region
      • Denmark
      • Finland
      • Sweden
      • Norway
      • Polar
      • Greenland
      • Iceland
    • Nuclearism
      • Nuclear abolition
      • Nuclear dangers
      • Nuclear Free Zones
      • Nuclear possession
      • Nuclear weapons
    • Russia international relations
    • Ukraine
    • United Nations
    • United States – Empire and domestic
    • US Empire
  • Classics
  • Peace
    • Alternative media – peace journalism
    • Alternatives – peace
    • Art and peace
    • EU peace
    • Nobel peace prize
    • Peace – reconciliation
    • Peace and religions
    • Peace and women
    • Peace culture
  • China
    • Silk
    • Xinjiang
  • Europe
    • UE and NATO
    • Europe outside EU
  • Oberg
  • Culture
    • Peace culture
  • World order
    • World order – futures
    • World order/governance
  • Nuclear
    • Nuclearism
    • Nuclear weapons
    • Nuclear abolition
    • Nuclear dangers
    • Nuclear free zones
    • Nuclear possession
  • Cold War
    • Cold War – new
    • Cold War – old and New
    • Cold war
  • Terrorism
    • Terrorism – war on terror
    • War on terror
  • Nonviolence
  • Media
    • Alternative media – peace journalism
    • Media and conflict
    • Media perspectives
    • Omitted media
  • Videos
  • TFF on Substack
Media and conflict
February 24, 2018
Painting an Israeli Attack on Syria as Israeli ‘Retaliation’ - And the Golan Height Dimensions

 

Painting an Israeli Attack on Syria as Israeli ‘Retaliation’

Examples of Israeli "retaliation."

Reuters, Vice and LA Times write about Israeli “retaliation.”

 

By Gregory Shupak

February 21, 2018

 

Originally published by FAIR – Fairness And Accuracy In Reporting here

Israel claimed that it intercepted an Iranian drone in Israeli airspace on Saturday, February 10; Iran denied that it had a drone there. Israel then bombed a Syrian airbase, saying it was the command-and-control center from which Iran had launched the drone. The Syrian government shot down an Israeli jet that had bombed the base, and Israel subsequently launched more airstrikes against Syria.

Reuters (2/13/18) described the latter airstrikes as Israel having “retaliated” for the downing of its aircraft. Vice (2/13/18) too characterized them as “retaliatory”; the Los Angeles Times (2/11/18) did the same three times. These word choices wrongly imply that Israel was acting defensively, when it was Israel who fired the first shots in the weekend’s exchanges: These outlets were saying that Israel was “retaliating” against Syria for defending itself against an ongoing Israeli attack.

“Retaliation” is an exculpatory term. To say that a party is “retaliating” is to say that their actions are an understandable response to another party’s provocation. As FAIR’s Rachel Coen and Peter Hart (Extra!, 5–6/02) wrote more than a decade and a half ago, the term “lays responsibility for the cycle of violence at the doorstep of the party being ‘retaliated’ against, since they presumably initiated the conflict.” In this case, casting Syria and Iran as the aggressors rests on the dubious assumption that flying a drone over Israel—if Israel’s charge is accurate—is more aggressive than Israel dropping bombs on Syria.

 

CNN: Israel: Jets Faced Heavy Syrian Anti-Aircraft Fire

Painting warplanes carrying out an aggressive bombing raid as victims.

 

It also rests on the flawed assumption that the timeline of hostilities between Israel and the Syrian government began on Friday, February 9. However, despite the Associated Press’s untenable claim (2/10/18) that “Israel has mostly stayed out of the prolonged fighting in Syria,” Israel admits to having bombed the Syrian government and its ally Hezbollah nearly 100 times since the war in Syria began in 2011 (Reuters, 2/6/18). If Brigadier General Amnon Ein Dar, the head of the Israeli Air Force’s Air Division, is to be believed (Ynet, 2/11/18), the Israeli military has “carried out thousands of missions in Syria in the last year alone.”

A Washington Post article (2/10/18) made the similarly dubious assertion that “Israel has largely stood on the sidelines of the Syrian conflict over the past seven years.” In the next paragraph, though, the author acknowledges that “Israel has conducted dozens of covert airstrikes against [the Syrian government-aligned] Hezbollah weapons convoys in Syria,” and the piece goes on, in a spectacular display of self-contradiction, to note that “Israel has carried out a number of significant attacks in Syria in recent months.”

Israel has also supported the Syrian armed opposition for years, the Wall Street Journal (6/18/17) reported, supplying fighters with food, fuel, medical supplies “and money payments to commanders that help pay salaries of fighters and buy ammunition and weapons.” According to the Journal, the Israeli army “is in regular communication with rebel groups,” and Israel “has established a military unit that oversees the support in Syria—a country that it has been in a state of war with for decades—and set aside a specific budget for the aid, said one person familiar with Israeli operation.” There is even reason to believe that Israel has had an alliance with the Al Qaeda affiliate in Syria (Middle East Monitor, 5/26/15; Electronic Intifada, 6/16/15). None of the articles cited here on the February 10 clashes mentioned this important backdrop.

 

Turning an Occupation Into a ‘Border’

Golan Heights (cc photo: Kyle Taylor)

The Golan Heights, an Israeli-occupied part of Syria. (cc photo: Kyle Taylor)

 

Coverage of these events also failed to correctly describe the status of the Golan Heights, a piece of land that is central to the Israeli/Syrian conflict. Israel occupied the territory in the 1967 war, fought off a Syrian effort to reclaim it in 1973, and illegally annexed it in 1981. Israel has sought to take advantage of the war that has devastated Syria for nearly seven years by, as Matt Broomfield writes in the Electronic Intifada (11/11/16), planning a fivefold increase in the number of Israeli settlers in the Golan, allocating $108 million for 750 new Israeli agricultural projects in the territory, and significantly expanding military forces along the boundary between Syria and the area under Israeli control.

The New York Times (2/10/18) made two references to “the Israeli-held portion of the Golan Heights,”  a rather anodyne depiction of territory that is internationally recognized as Syrian, but which Israel seized by force of arms and claimed for itself.

The Washington Post (2/10/18) said that “Israel shares a contentious border with Syria—the Golan Heights.” But the Golan isn’t “a contentious border”; it’s a territory that, despite Israeli claims to the contrary, unambiguously belongs to Syria under international law.

A CNN report (2/11/18) closed by saying that “authorities also accused Syria in November of violating the 1974 ceasefire agreement [with Israel] by “conducting construction work” in the northern part of the Golan Demilitarized Zone.” While it’s unclear which authorities are being referenced, this passage neglects to mention that by late 2015, Israel had built 30 settlements, housing 20,000 settlers, in the Golan, or that a year later it announced plans for 1,600 new homes in the territory, “construction work” that has been roundly condemned by “authorities” like the United Nations.

Moreover, 20,000 Syrians live in the Golan, and many are directly harmed by Israeli policies. According to the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), Israel’s discriminatory land, housing and development policies in the territory have made it hard for Syrians to get building permits, leading to increasingly overcrowded Syrian towns and villages. The UNHRC also points out that Israel has demolished a Syrian home, and that a number of Syrian homeowners have reportedly received demolition notices.

This larger context of Israel’s Syria policies would have helped news readers make sense of what occurred on February 10, but it was absent. Given that Israel had just launched an airstrike on a Syrian base, has apparently bombed Syria close to 100 times in the past six years, has carried out perhaps 1,000 attacks against it in the last year, has backed an armed insurgency against the Syrian government, and has stolen and illegally colonized Syrian land while oppressing and dispossessing Syrian civilians, it is far more accurate to say that Syria retaliated against Israel on February 10.

Originally published by FAIR – Fairness And Accuracy In Reporting here

 

About The Author

Gregory Shupak

Gregory Shupak

Gregory Shupak teaches media studies at the University of Guelph-Humber in Toronto. His book, The Wrong Story: Palestine, Israel and the Media, is published by OR Books.

Share

Media and conflictMiddle East conflict formation

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

Cold war
Don’t be fooled: Others Could Have More Interest in Sending Drones to the Nordic Countries than Russia
Drones over Nordic airports. No damage. No trace. No answers. Most assume Russia—but what if that’s not so? Why is there so much we are not told? This article explores the strategic ambiguity behind recent drone incursions and asks: Who else might benefit from sending drones into NATO airspace? From Ukraine’s surprising drone supremacy to Russia’s possible signalling, the silence itself may be the loudest message. These are the kinds of questions decent, intelligent investigative journalists and commentators could easily research. Why don’t they? Did you, dear reader, know or think of this? That the most powerful weapon in today’s conflicts might be the one that leaves no trace – and no answers. Just enough fear to justify the next move? Recently, drones have repeatedly appeared over Nordic airports and near some military facilities. They cause no damage – for which reason the designation “hybrid attack” is misleading but serves a purpose. These...
Featured
The Western Liberal Media New Messaging on Gaza: A Critique from the Perspective of Peace and Justice Journalism
A slightly modified version of a text published on Sept. 1, 2025 in TMS. On August 25 Thomas Friedman, always a weathervane for political and economic establishment thinking in the West, wrote a notable column in the NY Times that was pragmatic in tone, misleading in substance, and regressive in intention. Yet it reflects a growing ambivalence toward Israel’s prolonged genocide even among longtime supporters of Israel that now highlights starvation, famine, and a gross distortion of the delivery of humanitarian aid under emergency conditions. But expressed dangerously without hiding the hope that Israel could even now restore its legitimacy without being held accountable for crimes in Gaza and despite all, still expecting to be rewarded by excluding Hamas from any further governance role in Gaza and continuing to move toward the annexation of the West Bank by formal action or through further settlement expansion. It is notable that the headline of...
Genocide
Britain, which created the Israeli-Palestinian Mess, will Finally Recognize Palestinian State
Professor emeritus, TFF Associate Oxford (Special to Informed Comment; Feature) The dam has burst. Netanyahu and his far-right regime have gone too far. Public pressure on politicians in Europe and many other countries has become irresistible, forcing them to change course. Most countries, 147 of the UN’s 193 members, have formally recognized a Palestinian state, and last week, France pledged to do so at the UN meeting in September. Fourteen nations, including Canada, New Zealand and Australia, join France in a push to recognize a Palestinian state. The British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, one of Israel’s staunchest allies who even refused to condemn the Israeli blockade of food, water, medicine and fuel to the Palestinians after the terrible events of 7th October, has buckled under the pressure of public opinion. More than 255 MPs of all parties signed a letter addressed to the prime minister in which they urged him to...

Recent Articles

PressInfo
PressInfos 2001
PressInfo # 141, December 21, 2001It’s time to prepare reconciliation between Albanians and Serbs PressInfo # 140, December 14, 2001Ibrahim Rugova’s decade-long leadership in Kosovo/a PressInfo # 139, 11. december, 2001En god nyhet: Jugoslaviens Sannings- och försoningskommission PressInfo # 139, 11. december, 2001Gode nyheder: Jugoslaviens Sandheds- og Forsoningskommission PressInfo # 139, December 11, 2001Good news: Yugoslavia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission PressInfo # 138, November 8, 2001TFF co-founder PhD with thesis about young people with roots in other cultures PressInfo # 138, November 8, 2001TFF:s medstiftare doktor på avhandling om unga med ursprung i andra kulturer PressInfo # 137, October 17, 2001A new Marshall Plan: Advancing human security and controlling terrorism PressInfo # 136, October 15, 2001The UN and Annan really deserve it PressInfo # 135, October 10, 2001Preventing a terrorist mushroom cloud PressInfo # 134, 17 oktober, 2001Sverige og 11. september PressInfo # 134, October 9, 2001Sweden and September 11...
Archive 1986 - 2017
PressInfo #112 – Peaceful Europe – Something different
Peace is promoted by constructive proposals and dialogue Four preceding PressInfos have expressed concern over — and criticised — the ongoing, militarisation of the EU. Some will say: but there are no alternatives. We believe that there are always alternatives, that democracies are characterised by alternatives and choice, and that openly discussed alternatives will improve the quality and legitimacy of society’s decision–making. In addition, it is an intellectual and moral challenge to not only criticise but also be constructive. If we only tell people that we think they are wrong, they are not likely to listen. However, if we say: what are your views on this set of ideas and steps? — we may sometimes engage them in dialogue and sow a seed. Most people in power circles live their daily lives in in a time frame and a social space where certain ideas, viewpoints and concepts are just not...
Archive 1986 - 2017
Pictures of the Humanitarian Situation in Serbia Spring 2000
Photos © TFF 2000 Read PressInfo 90 “Lift the Sanctions and Bring More Aid to Yugoslavia” See Pictures from Belgrade © TFF 2000 Please reprint, copy, archive, quote or re-post this item, but please retain the source.

TFF on Substack

Discover more from TFF Transnational Foundation & Jan Oberg.

Posts
Videos

Most Popular

PressInfo
PressInfos 2001
PressInfo # 141, December 21, 2001It’s time to prepare reconciliation between Albanians and Serbs PressInfo # 140, December 14, 2001Ibrahim Rugova’s decade-long leadership in Kosovo/a PressInfo # 139, 11. december, 2001En god nyhet: Jugoslaviens Sannings- och försoningskommission PressInfo # 139, 11. december, 2001Gode nyheder: Jugoslaviens Sandheds- og Forsoningskommission PressInfo # 139, December 11, 2001Good news: Yugoslavia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission PressInfo # 138, November 8, 2001TFF co-founder PhD with thesis about young people with roots in other cultures PressInfo # 138, November 8, 2001TFF:s medstiftare doktor på avhandling om unga med ursprung i andra kulturer PressInfo # 137, October 17, 2001A new Marshall Plan: Advancing human security and controlling terrorism PressInfo # 136, October 15, 2001The UN and Annan really deserve it PressInfo # 135, October 10, 2001Preventing a terrorist mushroom cloud PressInfo # 134, 17 oktober, 2001Sverige og 11. september PressInfo # 134, October 9, 2001Sweden and September 11...
Archive 1986 - 2017
PressInfo #112 – Peaceful Europe – Something different
Peace is promoted by constructive proposals and dialogue Four preceding PressInfos have expressed concern over — and criticised — the ongoing, militarisation of the EU. Some will say: but there are no alternatives. We believe that there are always alternatives, that democracies are characterised by alternatives and choice, and that openly discussed alternatives will improve the quality and legitimacy of society’s decision–making. In addition, it is an intellectual and moral challenge to not only criticise but also be constructive. If we only tell people that we think they are wrong, they are not likely to listen. However, if we say: what are your views on this set of ideas and steps? — we may sometimes engage them in dialogue and sow a seed. Most people in power circles live their daily lives in in a time frame and a social space where certain ideas, viewpoints and concepts are just not...
Archive 1986 - 2017
Pictures of the Humanitarian Situation in Serbia Spring 2000
Photos © TFF 2000 Read PressInfo 90 “Lift the Sanctions and Bring More Aid to Yugoslavia” See Pictures from Belgrade © TFF 2000 Please reprint, copy, archive, quote or re-post this item, but please retain the source.
Read More
Imagen-thumbnail-The-Transnational-1
PressInfo
PressInfos 2001
PressInfo # 141, December 21, 2001It’s time to prepare reconciliation between Albanians and Serbs PressInfo # 140, December 14, 2001Ibrahim Rugova’s decade-long leadership in Kosovo/a PressInfo # 139, 11. december, 2001En god nyhet: Jugoslaviens Sannings- och försoningskommission PressInfo # 139, 11. december, 2001Gode nyheder: Jugoslaviens Sandheds- og Forsoningskommission PressInfo # 139, December 11, 2001Good news: Yugoslavia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission PressInfo # 138, November 8, 2001TFF co-founder PhD with thesis about young people with roots in other cultures PressInfo # 138, November 8, 2001TFF:s medstiftare doktor på avhandling om unga med ursprung i andra kulturer PressInfo # 137, October 17, 2001A new Marshall Plan: Advancing human security and controlling terrorism PressInfo # 136, October 15, 2001The UN and Annan really deserve it PressInfo # 135, October 10, 2001Preventing a terrorist mushroom cloud PressInfo # 134, 17 oktober, 2001Sverige og 11. september PressInfo # 134, October 9, 2001Sweden and September 11...
Imagen-thumbnail-The-Transnational-1
Archive 1986 - 2017
PressInfo #112 – Peaceful Europe – Something different
Peace is promoted by constructive proposals and dialogue Four preceding PressInfos have expressed concern over — and criticised — the ongoing, militarisation of the EU. Some will say: but there are no alternatives. We believe that there are always alternatives, that democracies are characterised by alternatives and choice, and that openly discussed alternatives will improve the quality and legitimacy of society’s decision–making. In addition, it is an intellectual and moral challenge to not only criticise but also be constructive. If we only tell people that we think they are wrong, they are not likely to listen. However, if we say: what are your views on this set of ideas and steps? — we may sometimes engage them in dialogue and sow a seed. Most people in power circles live their daily lives in in a time frame and a social space where certain ideas, viewpoints and concepts are just not...
Imagen-thumbnail-The-Transnational-1
Archive 1986 - 2017
Pictures of the Humanitarian Situation in Serbia Spring 2000
Photos © TFF 2000 Read PressInfo 90 “Lift the Sanctions and Bring More Aid to Yugoslavia” See Pictures from Belgrade © TFF 2000 Please reprint, copy, archive, quote or re-post this item, but please retain the source.
Imagen-thumbnail-The-Transnational-1
Archive 1986 - 2017
Ministerbetjening, ministerbetjening, ministerbetjening
Av FRANK SØHOLM GREVIL 16 augusti 2004  Vi er nu nået til tredje akt i det absurde teaterstykke, der i analogi med de store skueprocesser i Moskva 1936-38 er blevet døbt ‘Grevil-sagen’. Første akt bestod i min anonyme fremlæggelse af egenhændigt nedklassificerede rapporter i Berlingske Tidende i februar og marts. Andet akt udgjordes af min fremtræden med navn og billede i Information i april samt den efterfølgende mediestorm, som uden min direkte medvirken kostede en forsvarsminister taburetten samt en sigtelse for brud på tavshedspligten. Tredje akt bliver en retssag, hvor jeg står tiltalt for at have overtrådt straffelovens bestemmelser om uberettiget videregivelse eller udnyttelse af fortrolige oplysninger. Statsanklageren har ovenikøbet valgt at påberåbe sig særligt skærpende omstændigheder. Da jeg aldrig har modtaget betaling for at stille rapporterne til rådighed eller lade mig interviewe, må det skærpende bestå i, at “videregivelsen eller udnyttelsen er sket under sådanne omstændigheder, at det påfører...
Imagen-thumbnail-The-Transnational-1
Archive 1986 - 2017
NEJ TILL KRIGET MOT IRAK
Af Svenska Irakkommittén mot de Ekonomiska Sanktionerna (SIES) 13 september 2002 FN:s ekonomiska sanktioner mot Irak har nu pågått i tolv år och drabbat det irakiska folket med svåra lidanden. Enligt FN:s egna siffror har mer än 1,5 miljoner människor, varav ca 600 000 barn, dött som en direkt följd av sanktionerna. Dessutom har ett lågintensivt bombkrig mot landet pågått under dessa år. Av all denna förödelse- orsakad huvudsakligen av amerikansk och brittisk politik- har Saddam Husseins brutala och diktatoriska regim snarast stärkts än försvagats. Nu förbereder USA under president Bushs ledning ett storskaligt bombkrig mot Irak som kommer att innebära ett ännu större lidande för civilbefolkningen. Ett sådant krig kommer dessutom att ytterligare undergräva freden och säkerheten i världen. Att upprätta en demokratisk regim i Irak är det irakiska folkets angelägenhet och får enligt folkrätten inte ske med krigshandlingar utifrån. Folkrätten och FN:s stadgar måste respekteras. Vi vädjar till...
Imagen-thumbnail-The-Transnational-1
Archive 1986 - 2017
The Transnational W I R E #15 – May 5, 2000 
Links to Facts & Views

Art with a Purpose

Every photograph tells a story—and carries a mission. When you buy from Oberg PhotoGraphics, you’re not just collecting art; you’re funding dialogue, education, and action for a more peaceful future.
Explore the Collections

Sign Up For Updates

Since 1986 about 9500 articles for a better understanding of our world and times.
Follow Us
Facebook-f X-twitter Linkedin-in Tiktok Telegram Weixin Vk
Donate
In a nutshell
8000+ peace research and policy articles and publications – one of the world’s largest reservoirs of its kind • Covering three decades of global affairs. 50 uniquely qualified & experienced Associates • A leading source to education, a platform for serious debate and action • Critique that lasts • Predictions that come true • Your trustworthy place for the necessary principle of making peace by peaceful means.
  • Vegagatan 25 224 57 Lund, Sweden
  • +46 738 525200
  • tff@transnational.live

© 1986-Today All rights reserved TFF • The Transnational Foundation • Lund Sweden • Made by CaptivateClick

  • Home
  • About us
    • Mission
    • Themes & Programs
    • Who are we?
    • Authors
    • Organization and Identity
    • Editorial Policies and principles
    • Privacy policy
    • FAQs
  • A-L Themes
    • Academic
    • Africa
      • Burundi
      • Horn of Africa
      • Middle East-North Africa
      • North Africa
    • Asia
      • China
      • Cambodia
      • Silk
      • India
      • Japan
      • Myanmar
      • North Korea
      • Pakistan
      • South Korea
      • South India
      • Thailand
      • Xinjiang
    • Cold War – Old and New
    • Democracy in Crisis
    • Development worldwide
    • Dialogue
    • Europe
      • EU Countries Trends
      • EU foreign policies
      • EU security and defence
      • Europe outside EU
      • Refugee crisis
      • Yugoslavia then and now
    • Future world – imagination/real
    • Globalisation – Nationalism
    • Human rights and justice
    • History
    • International law
  • M-Z Theme
    • Militarism (MIMAC)
      • Nato
    • Middle East
      • Afghanistan
      • Arab Spring and after
      • Egypt
      • Georgia
      • Iran
      • Iraq
    • Nordic Region
      • Denmark
      • Finland
      • Sweden
      • Norway
      • Polar
      • Greenland
      • Iceland
    • Nuclearism
      • Nuclear abolition
      • Nuclear dangers
      • Nuclear Free Zones
      • Nuclear possession
      • Nuclear weapons
    • Russia international relations
    • Ukraine
    • United Nations
    • United States – Empire and domestic
    • US Empire
  • Classics
  • Peace
    • Alternative media – peace journalism
    • Alternatives – peace
    • Art and peace
    • EU peace
    • Nobel peace prize
    • Peace – reconciliation
    • Peace and religions
    • Peace and women
    • Peace culture
  • China
    • Silk
    • Xinjiang
  • Europe
    • UE and NATO
    • Europe outside EU
  • Oberg
  • Culture
    • Peace culture
  • World order
    • World order – futures
    • World order/governance
  • Nuclear
    • Nuclearism
    • Nuclear weapons
    • Nuclear abolition
    • Nuclear dangers
    • Nuclear free zones
    • Nuclear possession
  • Cold War
    • Cold War – new
    • Cold War – old and New
    • Cold war
  • Terrorism
    • Terrorism – war on terror
    • War on terror
  • Nonviolence
  • Media
    • Alternative media – peace journalism
    • Media and conflict
    • Media perspectives
    • Omitted media
  • Videos
  • TFF on Substack