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Comment: While Sisi and Putin both hope to manipulate public opinion, the Egyptian leader lacks Putin's know-how and masterful handling of information, writes Robert Springborg.
Palestinian Nasri Hajjaj spent twenty years of his life in Tunisia, where he saw the scene set for the Jasmine Revolution.
Comment: Voters in Jordan have had little faith in the system's capacity to deliver reform. But this month's election could provide an opportunity to change perceptions, writes Naseem Tarawnah
Comment: Syria's war resembles a foreign occupation more than a system of domestic repression, writes Robin Yassin-Kassab.
The West's democratic project stops at the borders of the Arab world as a fear of Islamism props up despots and prevents the fruition of liberty and people power.
Comment: In the wake of the failed 15 July coup, tens of thousands of people have been detained, arrested or lost their jobs, effectively paralysing Turkish institutions, writes Joris Leverink.
Lone wolves or 'leaderless Jihadis' are a phenomenon that has roots in the19th Century. Dalia Ghanem-Yazebeck looks at these terrorists and how they operate.
Comment: Reverberations of Turkey's attempted coup were felt thousands of kilometres away in The Netherlands, where the Dutch-Turkish community retain strong attachments to their country of origin, says Brenda Stoter.
Comment: While Kurdish leaders carefully distance themselves from the attempted coup, Erdogan is now even less likely to compromise or grant political rights to the Kurdish community, writes Yeghia Tashjian
Comment: While Clinton faces a more difficult campaign due to the email scandal, her supporters are likely to stick by her, despite their disappointment, writes Roxanne Perugino