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Opinion: As we mark 20 years since 9/11, the US must realise it no longer has the means to lord it over the world, let alone decide the fate of countries such as Afghanistan and Iraq, writes Alain Gresh.
°®Âþµº's Managing Editor, Karim Traboulsi, writes a scathing indictment of the Lebanese government and its negligence over the devastating Beirut explosion.
Comment: With its currency in free-fall, half the population plunged into poverty, and IMF talks in disarray, Lebanon appears to be lurching towards a chaotic collapse, writes Jim Muir.
Comment: While Amer Fakhoury has been freed from detention, the ramifications of his case are far from over in Lebanon, writes Joe Macaron.
Opinion: Having successfully unified the extreme right and the secular Jews, Prime Minister Bennett is the result of more than half a century of rising religious soft power in Jewish Israeli society, writes Sylvain Cypel.
Comment: Sectarianism is seen as the tragic norm in today's Middle Eastern conflicts, but its roots were put down 40 years ago during the Iran-Iraq war, writes Talha Abdulrazaq
Comment: The endemic problems that sparked the October protests in Iraq have not gone away in the aftermath of Soleimani's assassination, writes Ibrahim Al-Marashi.
Comment: Replacing Lebanon's leadership elites with more of the same will seal their fate, writes Paul Gadalla.
Comment: Overambitious Gebran Bassil represents everything wrong with Lebanon's political system. For this reason, he has become the butt of jokes at demonstrations, writes Dalal al-Bizri.
Comment: If the Arab and Iranian regimes hope to survive, they should implement a new social contract enshrining the people's right to hold their leaders accountable, writes Emile Nakhleh.