urban planning - Tag Search

Ditching Damascus

Could the Syrian government move its capital from Damascus to a newly-engineered city? IWPR reports that the idea is making the rounds in Syrian newspapers (h/t Syria News Wire).

The IWPR says it is one of a number of ideas to reduce congestion in Damascus by taking Syria's political and administrative away from the city. The new capital would be in the town of Hasiaa, near Homs.

Not only would it mean thousands of people moving out of Damascus, but it would prevent the rural-urban drift - where people come to Damascus looking for work. In effect, Syria would be more of a two-centred country, like the US with the New York-Washington DC divide.

The new city certainly wouldn't overshadow Damascus, which would remain the cultural and commercial capital of Syria (it is the oldest continuously-inhabited place on Earth, after all). And I guess the Homs area has some advantages as a political capital, like its location, at the intersection of Syria's main north-south and east-west highways.

But engineering a whole new Syrian capital -- and in just five years, according to the article? Count me as skeptical...

B'Tselem: Settlements occupy 42 percent of West Bank

Ben-Eliezer makes "secret trip" to Turkey: Israeli TV

CENTCOM talking sense on Hamas and Hizballah

Al-Akhbar: Our weekly brief

Peace Processing

Talking about direct talks: Netanyahu returns to the White House

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivering a statement in Jerusalem on July 1, 2010. (Photo: AFP)
US president Barack Obama will use a White House meeting with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to push for an extended West Bank settlement freeze. If Netanyahu doesn't offer one - and the domestic politics are quite difficult for him - it's hard to see any possibility of direct talks with the Palestinian Authority later this year.

The Afghan Surge

Obama's southern strategy

Gen. David Petraeus testifying on Capitol Hill. (Photo: Reuters)
The president's decision to nominate Gen. David Petraeus as the commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan won't mean a major change in strategy. But there are mounting reasons for pessimism about current policy, particularly the relentless focus on southern Afghanistan. The deployment of tens of thousands of additional troops to Kandahar and Helmand serves few NATO objectives.

Freedom Flotilla Killings

Anticlimax: How much did the flotilla raid really change regional politics?

A demonstration in London against the Israeli attack on the Gaza-bound flotilla. (Photo: AFP)
It has accelerated Israel's isolation from several of its neighbors and allies; it has sharpened divisions within Turkish domestic politics; it has deepened perceptions that the Obama administration as too close to Israel. And it seems to have had a remarkably minor impact on Palestinian domestic politics.