Jews and Muslims Must Show Unity Against Jihadists
Ed Husain discusses the Toulouse shootings and the need for Jews and Muslims to demonstrate togetherness against a common enemy.
Ed Husain discusses the Toulouse shootings and the need for Jews and Muslims to demonstrate togetherness against a common enemy.
Robert Putnam leads a conversation on the relationship between religion and politics in the United States and what it means for the upcoming presidential election.
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Ray Takeyh discusses the displacement of moderate voices from corridors of power in the Islamic Republic.
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Gayle Tzemach Lemmon says that while Afghan women deplore the burning of the Quran by U.S. troops, they are even angrier at the bloody protests that followed.
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Max Boot argues that despite the recent protests over the burning of Qurans, Afghans do not want a return of the Taliban--and they don't hate America.
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Ned Parker, CFR's Edward R. Murrow press fellow, discusses the current situation in Iraq and the recent escalation of sectarian violence.
John Campbell says that as oil-rich Nigeria continues to suffer from decades-long dysfunctional governance and tensions between the Christian South and the Muslim North are rising, Nigeria is in need of creative American diplomacy.
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From the day the Pilgrims stepped off the Mayflower, religion has played a prominent role in American public life.
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The protests sweeping Afghanistan over the burning of Qurans at a U.S. base may spread to other Muslim countries unless U.S. and NATO officials act swiftly, says CFR's Ed Husain.
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The Economist writes that China's conservative wing finds religion within its ranks--and dislikes it.
President Obama gave these remarks at the National Prayer Breakfast on February 2, 2012.
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Suzan Johnson Cook, Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom, presided in this interview on the role of religion in foreign policy, with interviewees Cheryl Benton (Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Public Affairs) and Dr. Chris Seiple (President of the Institute for Global Engagement), in Washington, DC on January 23, 2012.
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This session was a meeting of the Civil Society, Democracy, and Countering Radicalism Roundtable series.
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Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite, professor of theology at Chicago Theological Seminary and editor of Interfaith Just Peacemaking: Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Perspectives on the New Paradigm of Peace and War, leads a discussion on Just Peace theory.
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Ed Husain reviews Imran Khan's Pakistan.
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While widening violence by Nigeria's Islamist group Boko Haram has caused concerns about its possible links to international terrorist groups, some experts argue it's best to focus on addressing the crippling poverty, political corruption, and police abuses that are at the root of the violence.
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Elliott Abrams discusses the Castro regime's prisoner release, in which USAID contractor Alan Gross was not included.
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Elliott Abrams examines whether anti-Semitic material is returning to the mainstream media, and who will now protest this development.
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Ed Husain states that the Muslim Brotherhood is far removed from al-Qaeda and the supporters of violent jihad, and its rise in Egypt should not be feared.
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Ahmed Rashid argues that sectarian bloodshed is employed in Afghanistan and Egypt as a tool to thwart democracy and diplomacy.
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How can the United States help support peace in Macedonia and the Balkans?
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