clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

 

Alastair Sloan

Alastair Sloan tweets and writes on international affairs, terrorism and Westminster politics and is author of the upcoming book, “What Does Michael Gove Really Think?” You can also read his work in Al Jazeera English and Newsweek.

 

Items by Alastair Sloan

  • Media coverage of FIFA needs a shift in priorities

    A man who may have ordered footballers in his own country to be tortured runs for the presidency of the most important footballing organisation in the world, and the Western media barely bats an eyelid. FIFA executives swap some cash in brown envelopes under a table, though, and the...

  • Cameron should think again about doing favours for a friend like Israel

    If you’re doing a favour for a friend, make sure that the friend in question is indeed a friend. That’s the lesson David Cameron should be pondering today, as his government announces plans to criminalise any public bodies which participate in the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement against...

  • Corbyn needs a compelling vision for the radical debate to go mainstream

    That Jeremy Corbyn is still leader of Britain’s Labour Party shouldn’t be a surprise. He’s won eight general elections as an MP, rebelled more than any other Labour member in the House of Commons and never faced deselection. In all that time he never made any secret of his...

  • The Israeli ambassador affair should concern us all, not just Tel Aviv

    Daniel Taub, the former Israeli ambassador in London, has been named as the subject of an investigation into possible sexual abuse of minors and homosexual affairs that threatened Israel’s national security. The news was broken by the tenacious blogger Richard Silverstein – after Israeli newspapers only reported that a...

  • Revealed: The Gulf business tycoons backing the Conservative Middle East Council

    British and Arab businessmen with strong commercial interests in Saudi Arabia are key funders of the Conservative Middle East Council, a Westminster body which has become increasingly vocal in its calls for Britain to stand by the House of Saud, despite the latter’s human rights abuses and possible war...

  • Cuts to anti-organised crime budgets are helping Daesh

    Imagine Daesh as a solar system; then imagine a white-hot sun in the middle. That is the die-hards, the ideologues, the unpersuadable few whose minds cannot be changed. Their hands are the most bloodied and there is no excuse for their actions; no political grievance can be worth the...

  • Why is hanging out with dictators wrong?

    Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales is back in Abu Dhabi. Those of you kind enough to read this column regularly might remember that in December 2014, Wales accepted a $500,000 grant from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) government to set up a new human rights organisation. In a heated email...

  • The House of Saud is stronger than ever

    Last night, the BBC’s Newsnight broadcast a skit about the impending collapse of the Saudi economy. The flagship show’s diplomatic editor, Mark Urban, provided grim narration to each new set of figures. The mood music suggested it was not unreasonable to expect four chaps on horses riding over the...

  • Will David Cameron hug a jihadi?

    Like it or not, jihad is back. And by back, I mean back like it was in the eighties; back in vogue, back in the mainstream, back in terms of general foreign policy usefulness. Back then, jihadists were used to get rid of communists. Now we’re using jihadists to...

  • It’s time for the Gulf States to leave Yemen and focus on the real barbarians — Daesh

    Why can’t the Arab states do as the Africans do when it comes to policing their own troubles? Both regions are post-colonial; both are relatively poor, although the Middle East has the Gulf, and some of the largest militaries in the world. Yet only Africans seem to police their...

  • Stop the War criticism has gone way too far

    Stop the War have a lot of faults. It can be frustrating to feel “represented” by them, particularly if like me, your general politics doesn’t follow their leftist world view – but you are opposed to military interventions in the Middle East. There is perhaps a failure of the...

  • The Saudis want a reputation fix, but buying journalists won’t do the trick

    There are signs that the reign of Saudi Arabia’s King Salman may see a shift in public relations strategy from his Riyadh government, in particular by making it easier for foreign journalists to visit the kingdom and by engaging Western journalists willing to work with its embassies. An international...

  • If multiculturalism has failed, the blame lies with neo-cons as much as Daesh

    Daesh doesn’t want Muslims and Christians to live together freely; it wants to eliminate what it calls the “grey zone”. The group’s own publication, Dabiq, makes this clear. This is the lesson from Paris of which we should be most wary. Future attacks will share this objective. Looking at the...

  • We need a new deal for Europe's Muslims

    France’s own war on terror, which has generally taken a different tack to that of the rest of the West, leaves much to be desired. The argument that its foreign policies are to blame for the Paris attacks are, however, conspicuously weak. France did not take part in the...

  • If you wouldn't say it about a Jew, please don't say it about a Muslim

    “Jews are transforming Europe, says celebrity, in warning over dangers of mass immigration. One major entertainment figure has bravely voiced an alternative view, highlight how an influx of Jews could change the nature of the UK for ever.” Does that headline and opening sentence make you feel uncomfortable? No? Perhaps...

  • Sisi can’t keep tourists or Egyptians safe, so why back him?

    Naturally not one for our Muslim readers, but as an occasional sunburned Brit abroad, I hear that the Savoy Hotels in Sharm El-Sheikh do a great “Bloody Mary”. That intoxicating mix of chilled vodka, tomato juice, celery and the essential tabasco sauce doesn’t offer real blood, of course, but...

  • What are we to make of Sisi's popularity?

    Number 10 will this week host its own Pyramid-shaped elephant in the room as Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi sits down for an expensive meal with Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron. There will be protesters hooting in the background, but the said elephant will repeat only one mantra: “Sisi...

  • Cameron’s blind spot in Libya

    It is easy to assume that in the British context, the mistake of invading Libya was down to decisions made by David Cameron himself. He was the Prime Minister at the time, and a key player in NATO talks. In reality, Cameron is a flabby weakling on foreign policy,...

  • Israel is making an unprecedented push into the youth wing of Britain’s Conservative Party

    The Israeli government, not Britain’s pro-Israel lobby, is engaged in an unprecedented push to capture the hearts and minds of the Conservative Party’s younger members. The evidence I present below is not a “Jewish conspiracy theory”, which David Cameron has in recent speeches rightly denigrated as dangerous and factually...

  • The EU needs to provide a radical alternative to Western foreign policy-making

    The European Union is supposed to have a foreign policy. It doesn’t call it a foreign policy; the EU calls it a “Neighbourhood Policy” for fear of giving the game away that many serious players in Brussels would prefer Europe to be a single European state. The Southern Neighbourhood...

  • Britain’s approach to Yemen has been both naïve and duplicitous

    The British government resigned itself to war in Yemen long before the Saudi-led coalition carried out its first sorties against Houthi-held targets in March this year. That’s according to a series of damning British government documents I have seen regarding “Friends of Yemen”, a diplomatic effort supposedly spearheaded by...

  • Corbyn must oppose an attack on Syria; lives may depend on it

    The Labour Party has changed forever the way that British foreign policy is conducted. This process has taken nearly fifteen years and began with Tony Blair’s hysterical reaction to the 9/11 attacks in 2001. It continued with Ed Miliband’s unprecedented parliamentary victory against Syrian intervention in 2013. It has...

  • Right-wing newspapers are leading anti-refugee agenda, but politicians should know better

    A week ago, David Cameron capitulated to humanitarian rather than political instinct. Twenty thousand places in Britain are to be offered to Syrian refugees over the next five years. From a leader who had previously called off boat rescues in the Mediterranean, possibly allowing hundreds of migrants to die...

  • Help the people as well as the government, plead Bahraini activists as human rights abuses continue

    The days surrounding my interview with Khalil Almarzooq are frantic. Shaikh Ali Salman, the Secretary General of Bahrain’s main opposition party, Al-Wefaq, is shortly to appeal against his conviction on charges related to inciting violence and advocating the overthrow of the ruling monarchy, the notorious Al-Khalifa family. As Assistant Secretary...