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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

  • The Sun has blood on its hands

    Tony Gallagher is an excellent newspaper editor. He oversaw the Telegraph‘s admirable scoop on the Westminster expenses scandal, a fine piece of investigative journalism which rightly saw MPs thrown in jail and forced to pay back their excesses gleaned at the expense of the taxpayer. Gallagher’s reputation is as a...

  • Europe must help refugees, but America has plenty of room to spare

    Europe is guided by buffoons, bigots and bumblers. That’s all I can conclude from the refugee crisis. It has taken a photograph of a dead child on a beach, rather than the hundreds of dead children who went before, to rouse the consciousness of the continent. In Britain, the Labour...

  • Yemen: The war nobody is talking about

    Al-Baghdadi, Al-Assad, Al-Sisi, Netanyahu, Rouhani – these regional goliaths with their recent adventures have swallowed up the available column inches. So when Human Rights Watch, the United Nations and Amnesty International yell: “WAR CRIMES IN YEMEN”; nobody, sadly, is listening. This has to change. As it stands, British taxpayers are...

  • Could Cameron be embarrassed again on Syria?

    Jeremy Corbyn, the Leftist candidate on track to become Labour Party leader next month, has real potential to redden the prime minister’s cheeks as the government bids to extend the Iraq bombing campaign into Syria. There is no doubt where the Conservative Party stands on this issue. Defence Secretary Michael...

  • The media should reconsider its international coverage; lives may depend on it

    In the age of easyJet, Ryanair, AirBnB and TripAdvisor, why does the news media still devote so little attention to international news? Unprecedented numbers of British tourists are now travelling abroad; low cost travel has made the world available to us; and yet the international pages of most newspapers...

  • Address legitimate injustice first, then see if the ideologues need to be bombed

    The case of Liam Lyburd, a British teenager currently recovering in a prison cell from his Valium addiction and ideological radicalisation, can teach David Cameron valuable lessons on how to address the problem of Daesh. This young man was found guilty last week of buying a Glock pistol, ninety...

  • Let’s be realistic about Kurdistan; it’s a deeply unpleasant autocracy

    In May last year, who in the West had heard of the “Peshmerga”? Wasn’t that a kind of scarf? No, the BBC, CNN and Sky News told us, these were warriors for freedom, brave Kurds, rallying against the ISIS threat when the Iraqi army had fled in disarray. Even...

  • Sale of Uzi manufacturer highlights Israeli hypocrisy towards arms trade

    Israeli Military Industries (IMI), the state-owned weapons designer and manufacturer, has been put up for privatisation. If there is one company that encapsulates Israel’s hypocritical approach to the arms trade, crime and human rights, it is IMI; and if there is one weapon, it is IMI’s “Uzi”, the iconic...

  • Losing influence in the Middle East

    It is the end of an era in the Gulf – for the United Kingdom at least. Once an imperialist power that used gunboats and clever diplomacy to push local wealthy families into supporting the British Empire, the formerly Great Britain has been reduced to little more than a...

  • When the system is inherently biased, it's all too easy for justice to evade foreigners in the UAE

    Jennifer Aresgado Dalquez is like any one of the million Filipinos living in the United Arab Emirates; she’s working hard to send money home for her two children back in General Santos City, a large city in the southern Philippines. Employed as a domestic worker, in December 2014 she stabbed...

  • Were Western hostages left to die?

    It looks as if official reviews concerning Iraq aren’t being treated as all that urgent by the British establishment these days, with seemingly endless delays in publishing the Chilcot Inquiry. It may, though, be time to ignore this depressing precedent of failed accountability and start a new inquiry, into...

  • A cry for help from inside a Saudi detention centre

    Last week a short video clip made its way onto my desk, taken on a mobile phone in Saudi Arabia. It was only a few seconds long, but it showed a large crowd of young men held in a single room, the floor covered in blankets. The men were...

  • Nostalgic imperialists may weep, but UK mission creep in Iraq, or anywhere else, is highly unlikely

    There is no risk of mission creep in Iraq, for Britain at least. This is worth saying as speculation mounts in the media each time even a handful more troops are deployed there. As a Mirror headline put it, “Fears UK could be dragged into war against ISIS as...

  • America's role in the rise of ISIS is down to incompetence not conspiracy

    As night follows day, a violent catastrophe is followed by a conspiracy theory. How do they begin and why do they spread so quickly? The first factor is simple market economics. Conspiracy theorist David Icke can make an estimated £300,000 per night for a speech. According to Forbes magazine, Alex...

  • A planned EU military deployment in Libya is ‘delusional’

    I have just published a short expose for Newsweek, in which a British government adviser called the European Union plan to deploy force against people traffickers along the Libyan coast “moronic and delusional.” A separate leaked document shows that senior military planners and EU chiefs have also been warned...

  • UAE makes terrorists out of artists and academics

    “After a fortnight’s work he will swagger about for a month or two with a sword at his side and a servant following him, from one ball-court to the next, ever ready to engage in a fight or an argument, so that it is most awkward to get along...

  • A Rugby League World Cup in the UAE would be both political and criminal

    The idea that sporting events should be apolitical is an excuse used by nasty people to get away with doing nasty things that they shouldn’t be doing to people who deserve better. Politicians don’t shy away from sports. They arrange themselves on the front row, taking selfies with their slack...

  • Conkers, cluster bombs and American double standards

    Playing conkers is a formative experience in any self-respecting British playground. For curious foreign friends who haven’t heard of this brilliant game, it requires two conkers — nuts which fall each autumn from horse chestnut trees — each with a small hole drilled through the centre so it can...

  • Anti-Semitism is not inevitable

    Holocaust Remembrance Day has just been commemorated in Israel. In Europe, Holocaust Memorial Day is held earlier in the year and is, for many reasons, an extraordinary annual event of reflection that is led primarily by representatives of the Jewish faith – done so with a courteous and noble...

  • Leaked emails reveal Hollywood execs at work for Israel

    Top Hollywood bosses enjoy a strong relationship with the Israeli government and various pro-Israel lobbying groups across the United States, according to a cache of Sony internal emails leaked to Wikileaks and published for the first time last week. The emails reveal a dinner between Sony executives and Prime Minister...

  • Britain's Jews shouldn't worry - Ed Miliband will back Israel

    The Jewish Chronicle has commissioned a fascinating political poll of British Jews’ voting intentions at the upcoming election. The results must be frightening for Labour strategists – showing mass approval for Prime Minister David Cameron, and the opposition leader Ed Miliband as a figure few British Jews trust. All...

  • The war in Yemen will be fought with Western arms

    Yemen has become a textbook example of how selling Western arms to unstable countries has always been, and will always remain, a thoroughly stupid idea. As the Saudi and UAE air forces attempt to zero in their strikes on Houthi positions, the regional fall guys in Tehran have taken...

  • The UK Foreign Office is flying blind

    You might, very reasonably, expect the UK’s Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO) to speak the language of the countries their policy affects. Or that when they brief politicians on crucial issues, that they have “immersed” themselves deep within foreign populations to understand fully the impact any new measures might...

  • Will a British court deliver justice for Bahraini torture victims?

    Campaigners are continuing with their attempt to hold a member of the Bahraini royal family to account over his alleged torture of pro-democracy protesters during the Pearl Roundabout uprising in February 2011. Their persistence is admirable and, it seems, they are making progress, step by step. In 2012, a dossier...