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On Monday, President Obama will sit down with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. With a showdown looming over Iran, their summit will not only be the most important meeting for either leader but it may also be the most consequential meeting for the entire Middle East since Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin’s 1993 handshake with PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat.
Mubarak's fall will have even deeper reverberations throughout the region than Ben Ali's did. Which will be the next dominoes to drop?
It is looking more and more likely. But the United States can still push for democratic reforms.
Egypt's Hosni Mubarak is leaving no stone unturned in his quest to secure the longevity of the regime and a seamless transition of power.
Mubarak's time in power is coming to an end, hopefully the outcome and emerging President can be something the US can live with.
Egypt is entering a period of flux, and a changing of the guard is bound to happen on Obama's watch.
The value of the Egyptian alliance is less than meets the eye.
President Obama's response to events in the Middle East, particularly in Libya, are so opaque, so convoluted, it's tempting to think there's some ingenious master plan in effect behind the scenes that he hasn't clued us in on.




