New Internationalism
The New Internationalism project works primarily on Middle East and United Nations issues. In the Middle East, the key focus areas are the U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the Israeli occupation of Palestine. In both arenas the project focuses on education and activism aiming to change the failed and failing U.S. policies, and retooling those policies to meet the goals of peace with justice. The project also works to challenge U.S. domination of the UN, and to help democratize and empower the global organization.
Stay up to date on events in the Middle East with Phyllis Bennis' free newsletter (delivered 1-2x a month).
What's Next in Afghanistan?
When Barack Obama ordered the surge of 30,000 troops into Afghanistan in 2009, he stipulated that a withdrawal would begin in July 2011 and continue until completion by 2014. What remains to be determined is how many troops will come home and what the pace of future withdrawal will be.
IPS's Phyllis Bennis debated Retired Army Lt. Col. John Nagl, president of the Center for a New American Security and Brian Katulis, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress on the future of U.S. policy in Afghanistan.
Recent Work
Commentary
Syria: The Threats, the Claims, the Costs, the Lives
May 22, 2013 - What the civil war in Syria and the Arab Spring have exposed is that the massive political and social transformation and real regime change underway is led by the people themselves, largely without military force and certainly with no role for the United States. U.S. military involvement serves only to escalate the destruction. By Phyllis Bennis
Commentary
Video: Syria Crisis Becoming Increasingly Sectarian
May 16, 2013 - Violent video showing Syrian rebels executing soldiers will make it harder for the U.S. to consider direct military engagement. By Phyllis Bennis
Interview
Video: Drums Beat for U.S. Military Intervention in Syria, but Israel Finds a Weakened Assad "Convenient"
May 14, 2013 - The humanitarian disaster in Syria is mostly ignored as external powers vie for position to control the outcome of civil war. By Phyllis Bennis
Interview
Video: Stephen Hawking Confirms Support of Israel Boycott
May 14, 2013 - Hawking's boycott of Israel will shake Israeli public the way sports boycott affected South Africa. By Phyllis Bennis
Commentary
Syria's Chemical Weapons...Iraq Redux?
May 3, 2013 - Phyllis Bennis discusses Guantanamo, Syria, Afghanistan, and her thoughts on the renewed Palestine-Israel talks. By Phyllis Bennis
Interview
Video: Phyllis Bennis discusses chemical weapons Syria
May 1, 2013 - The UN should have a broad mandate to investigate any use of chemical weapons on either side. By Phyllis Bennis
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We're Not Broke
Download We're Not Broke report
- Released December 5, 2012
By Emily Schwartz Greco
These revenue-raisers and spending cuts would narrow the federal budget deficit by $881 billion per year, nearly eliminating it altogether.
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America Is Not Broke
- Released November 21, 2011
By Sarah Anderson and John Cavanagh
This report challenges the premise that America is broke. In fact, we argue that the current fiscal challenge poses an opportunity to harness our ample but misdirected resources in ways that will make the country stronger.
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Barely Making the Grade: Obama's First Year
Download Barely Making the Grade: Obama
- Released January 14, 2010
By Sarah Anderson, Phyllis Bennis, Karen Dolan, John Feffer, Dedrick Muhammad, Daphne Wysham
After the first 100 days of the Obama administration, the Institute for Policy Studies introduced our Change Index to evaluate the policies and performance of the new president. Did the candidate who promised change deliver on his promises?
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Ending the U.S. War in Afghanistan: A Primer
- Published January 20, 2010
- 216
- ISBN 9781566567855
By Phyllis BennisThe Bush administration answered the terror attacks of September 11, 2001 with what it called the “global war on terror,” beginning with the assault and invasion of Afghanistan and then with the invasion and occupation of Iraq. As more and more Americans joined the opposition to the Iraq war, for many, Afghanistan remained “the good war.” But was Afghanistan ever a “good war”? And will President Obama’s plan and escalation of US troop presence in Afghanistan work?
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Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: A Primer
- Published May 30, 2009
- ISBN 978-1-56656-685-8
By Phyllis Bennis
If you have ever wondered "Why is there so much violence in the Middle East?", "Who are the Palestinians?", "What are the occupied territories?" or "What does Israel want?", then this is the book for you. With straightforward language, Phyllis Bennis, longtime analyst of the region, answers basic questions about Israel and Israelis, Palestine and Palestinians, the US and the Middle East, Zionism and anti-Semitism; about complex issues ranging from the Oslo peace process to the election of Hamas. Together her answers provide a comprehensive understanding of the longstanding Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
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Understanding the US-Iran Crisis: A Primer
- Published July 1, 2008
- ISBN 978-156656731
By Phyllis Bennis
Widening opposition to the illegal Iraq War, growing recognition that the war in Afghanistan has failed to bring stability or democracy to that beleaguered country, new tensions rising in Pakistan, escalating violence and humanitarian crisis in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories, all have brought new fears but also heightened interest in the wider Middle East region, especially interest in Iran. This book aims to address this new and renewed interest in Iran, to answer questions, and propose some ideas to prevent another looming disaster of a U.S. military attack
- May 15, 2013
CCTV News
Visit the publisher's websitePHYLLIS BENNIS: I think inside Syria [the video] is going to be one of the most antagonizing, provocative things one can imagine . . . But I think it also . . . is going to make it even harder for those in the U.S. . . . who are pressuring the Obama administration to take a more direct military role in this war . . . to say "there's a good opposition, yeah we know there's bad guys in the opposition, but there's a good opposition." Because apparently, from what we know, if it is true, the person who did this is from the Free Syrian Army, not from the Al-Nusra Front, not from the Al-Qaeda side.
. . . HOST: Is it too late for peace talks that start when, not just talking about the Syrian opposition, which as you've already pointed out, is all over the place, and the government -- but you're also talking about a region that's exploding.
PHYLLIS BENNIS: Absolutely. It's never too late.
When there's a war going on, what you need is to de-escalate; and you need negotiations, you need diplomacy. There's not going to be a military solution here. All there will be from the military is more dead Syrians.
So there needs to be negotiations, and this move between the US and Russia is a good first step. It will only have merit, it will only work if it is matched by an agreement by both sides, which means the US and Russia, yes, but also Qatar and Iran, for instance, the major backers militarily of each side; if they agree to stop sending additional weapons, then we may see some possibility for this new diplomacy. If the weapons continue to flow into both sides, and if the war continues, then the diplomacy won't matter.
- May 13, 2013
The Real News Network
Visit the publisher's websiteBENNIS: The difference here is that this civil war in Syria has already spilled over, and threatens to do so on a much larger scale throughout the region, because there are in fact at least five separate wars being fought in Syria right now in the context of the Syrian civil war, and only one of those five is the war between the Syrian regime and its armed opponents on the ground. You have a regional power struggle being fought in Syria between, largely, Saudi Arabia and Iran; you have a Sunni-Shia sectarian struggle; you have a global struggle between the U.S. and Russia in terms of naval bases and that sort of thing; and you have the ongoing fight between the U.S. and Israel on the one hand and Iran on the other hand over nuclear issues and other issues; all being fought to the last Syrian. So the notion that we can just sort of let this go, let them fight it out, and it won't have any impact, it's already having a huge impact.
- May 9, 2013
The Real News Network
Visit the publisher's websiteBENNIS: But there is no question that the pain of the boycott will be felt by individual Israelis. And the theory is--and this is, again, where it comes very close to the models that we saw during the South African era anti-apartheid movement--when South African, ordinary South African whites were affected by the sports boycott, they began to finally reconsider the cost to them of apartheid. In the Israeli instance, it means that Israelis who see Israeli culture and science and technology, the great accomplishments of Israeli society and what they're most proud of, perhaps, in their society, that when that starts to be affected by this global boycott, when you have instances of people like Stephen Hawking saying, I will not participate in an official institutional Israeli [incompr.] because there is a boycott designed to force Israel to stop its violations of international law and human rights, that's a huge reality.
- May 2, 2013
rabble.ca
Visit the publisher's websitePhyllis Bennis, a fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies, says that a growing push for war in Syria should remind U.S. citizens of the invasion of Iraq in 2003, which was was largely fueled by an uncritical press and a barrage of false information by some of the same power brokers now pushing for intervention in Syria.
"Now, we don't know that there is any fake information going on [in Syria]," Bennis said in an interview with Al-Jazeera. "But we certainly know that there is no valid information yet. So I think it is way premature to be talking about whether this should result in a 'game changing' scenario -- whether it be boots on the ground, or helping the rebels with more weapons."
- April 26, 2013
BBC Mundo
Visit the publisher's website"Phyllis Bennis, experta en Medio Oriente y la relación de EE.UU. con esa región del Instituto de Estudios Políticos en Washington (IPS, por sus siglas en inglés), explicó a BBC Mundo que, en un ambiente de guerra civil, es muy difícil saber con certidumbre qué pasó y quién es responsable.
"'Ha habido acusaciones mutuas tanto del régimen como de los rebeldes sobre el uso de químicos. También hay que tener en cuenta la lógica de las fuentes que se utilizan para obtener la evidencia,' declaró la experta.
"'Reino Unido y Francia están exhortando a una mayor intervención y esto podría apoyar su causa. Lo mismo podría decirse de Qatar, Arabia Saudita y Turquía. Todos tienen sus razones para que Estados Unidos se involucre militarmente.'
"Para Bennis una intervención militar sería ilegal pues la autorización de una guerra sólo puede estar sustentada en una amenaza contra la seguridad nacional."
The original article was written in Spanish. Here, Bennis's comments are translated back into English.
"Phyllis Bennis, an expert on U.S.-Middle East relations at IPS, explained to BBC Mundo that amid a civil war, it's very hard to know with any certainty what happened and who is to blame.
"'There have been mutual accusations from the regime and the rebels regarding the use of chemical weapons. You also have to consider the sources that are bing used to obtain this evidence,' the expert said.
"'The UK and France are demanding more intervention and this strengthen their case. The same could be said of Qatar, Saudi Arabia,and Turkey. They all have their reasons for wanting the U.S. to get militarily involved.'
"For Bennis, military intervention would be illegal since teh authorization of a war can only be supported in the case of a threat against national security."
- April 26, 2013
The Wall Street Journal
Visit the publisher's website"'The government, the military and the police are very much on edge,' said Phyllis Bennis, a fellow at the Washington-based Institute for Policy Studies. 'They're anticipating violence and there's the possiblity that they could go looking for it.'"
- April 26, 2013
AlterNet features article “Challenging Einstein: Kerry's 'New' Diplomacy in the Middle East”
Visit the publisher's website • See the article - April 25, 2013
Al Jazeera English features article “Challenging Einstein: Kerry's 'New' Diplomacy in the Middle East”
Visit the publisher's website • See the articleSo there is talk once again of a “new” US initiative in Israel-Palestine diplomacy. We have got a new secretary of state. John Kerry is shuttling between Jerusalem and Ramallah. Hopes are supposed to be rising again.
Really? We are supposed to cheer the possibility that 21 years of failed US diplomacy might - just might - become 22?
. . . But - if anyone inside is now peering outside the official Washington bubble to acknowledge the need for a different approach to Israel-Palestine diplomacy, that is all good. If anyone in the White House or State Department . . . begins to realise that doing the same thing over and over again, making the same failed claims that “the two sides have to sit together, both sides have to make compromises, only direct talks between the two parties can bring about peace” as if this were a negotiation between equals . . . rather than between a powerful, wealthy, nuclear-armed Occupying Power and an disempowered occupied people, that could mean the beginning of a new approach.
- March 27, 2013
The Real News Network
Visit the publisher's website"[I]t proves once again that [Obama's] got a Cracker Jack speech writing team. His speech in Jerusalem and even some of the stuff he said to the Palestinians was pretty great. You know, the man can talk. And the speech talked about justice . . . But the problem was he said all that wonderful stuff but made very clear, quite explicit, that if Israel simply said no, there would be no consequences.
. . . But it was also important . . . that when the U.S. wants to pressure Israel for something they want, which in this case was a reconciliation between its two crucial allies in the region, Israel and Turkey, the U.S. gets what it wants . . . And that's one of the important lessons. The U.S. has the capacity to pressure Israel.
It doesn't use that capacity on behalf of the Palestinians. It will use it when necessary to gain something vis-a-vis Turkey. But so far we have not seen a commitment to the lovely words that President Obama spoke to justice, to an end of occupation, to equality. We're not seeing that."
- March 22, 2013
Russia Today TV
Visit the publisher's websiteObama on Palestine: Talk is Cheap, Interview with Phyllis Bennis
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Phyllis Bennis