Foreign Affairs and Russia Writer

Michael Weiss

33 articles 2007–2011

Michael Weiss is a journalist and author specializing in Russian affairs, foreign policy, and international politics. He contributed extensively to The Weekly Standard from 2007 to 2011, writing on topics including Russia, Iran, and broader geopolitical issues. He is co-author of *ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror* and has served as a senior editor and columnist at various publications covering national security and foreign affairs.

Syria’s Choice

November 14, 2011 · Arab Spring, Bashar Al Assad, Middle East

It’s been a lousy week for Bashar al-Assad. First came news that Syria was to be suspended from the Arab League despite the complicating fact that Assad still technically holds the presidency of the Arab League Council, the chief decision-making body of the organization. Then, last night, King…

Syria’s Choice

November 14, 2011 · Arab Spring, Bashar Al Assad, Middle East

It’s been a lousy week for Bashar al-Assad. First came news that Syria was to be suspended from the Arab League despite the complicating fact that Assad still technically holds the presidency of the Arab League Council, the chief decision-making body of the organization. Then, last night, King…

Sectarianism, or a Trap by Assad?

July 22, 2011 · Arab Spring, Bashar Al Assad, Damascus

“Sectarian violence in Syria raises fears,” screamed the headline of a Washington Post article on the murder Tuesday of 16 Syrians in the city of Homs, which lies 100 miles north of Damascus. Admitting that "confirming details" of what happened are hard to come by in a city under siege, the Post's…

The BBC and the Muslim Brotherhood

March 11, 2011 · Middle East, Michael Weiss, Muslim Brotherhood

After Hosni Mubarak’s fall in Egypt, there was a whorl of ambiguous media commentary that either tried to present the Muslim Brotherhood as a conciliatory Islamist movement posing no threat to Egypt, its neighbours (read: Israel) or the West, or tried to challenge the Brotherhood about its core…

Human Rights Watch and Libya

March 4, 2011 · Libya, Human Rights, Michael Weiss

Where governments and statesmen can afford to be cynical about trade relations and security agreements with rogue regimes, human rights groups are supposed to operate at a higher level – the ultimate goal being for those regimes to alter their behavior. When NGOs traffic in realpolitik, it has a…

Why Cameron is Right on Multiculturalism

March 2, 2011 · David Cameron, Blog, Michael Weiss

For a politician whose previous career was in public relations, David Cameron cannot have picked a more polarizing subject, or less opportune time to address it, than his recent speech on the failure of state multiculturalism, which he delivered in early February at the Munich Security Conference.…

On the Palestine Papers

January 24, 2011 · Israel, Middle East, Blog

The first thing that should be said about the Guardian and Al Jazeera’s dump of 1,600 documents supposedly belonging to the Palestinian Negotiation Support Unity and supposedly detailing more than a decade of Palestinian-Israeli negotiations is that neither media outlet has said how it…

The Folly of Linkage

December 16, 2010 · Israel, Middle East, Michael Weiss

The theory of linkage holds that by resolving the Arab-Israeli conflict most other problems will be resolved. The end of the Arab-Israeli will contribute to the fight against terrorism as well as improve the prospects for Arab democracy and women’s rights. The conflict, linkage advocates argue, is…

Iran's Preferred Method: Psychological Torture

November 4, 2010 · Human Rights, Blog, Democracy

Totalitarianism thrives on deliberate ambiguity and the installation of perpetual fear in the mind of its subjected citizenry. Even after emigrating to Great Britain, the great Hungarian-Russian historian Tibor Szamuely could never get to bed at night because he never knew when that knock at the…

The UN Accuses Israel of War Crimes — Again

September 29, 2010 · Hamas, Israel, Gaza

A mere two days after May’s deadly flotilla raid off the coast of Gaza, the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), in a special “emergency session,” passed a resolution by a 32 to 3 count that “condemn[ed] in the strongest terms the outrageous attack by the Israeli forces against the…

Shiva Nazar Ahari's Plight Continues in Iran's Prisons

September 22, 2010 · Human Rights, Michael Weiss, Democracy

The 26-year-old Iranian human rights campaigner Shiva Nazar Ahari was sentenced last Saturday by Iran’s Revolutionary Court to six years in prison after being convicted on all charges made against her by the state, including that of moharebeh (“rebellion against God”), conspiracy to commit a crime…

A BBC Journalist's Fabulist Portrayal of an Israeli City

September 15, 2010 · Hamas, Israel, Gaza

BBC Arabic’s Jerusalem correspondent Ahmad Budeiri claims that were it not for “hostile environment training,” he might have been beaten and kidnapped by “an angry mob” of Israelis in Ashdod in response to his reporting on the Free Gaza flotilla raid.

Useful Idiots: Captive Minds, Empty Heads

September 3, 2010 · Michael Weiss, Blog

The BBC World Service recently broadcast a two-part investigative documentary, hosted by John Sweeney, on the useful idiot, a concept that Lenin didn’t invent so much as expropriate to denote the semi-witting accomplices of Western imperialism.  Although more frequently employed in the service of…

Will Obama Try to Save Iranian Shiva Nazar Ahari?

August 26, 2010 · Barack Obama, Human Rights, Michael Weiss

Iranian authorities first arrested Shiva Nazar Ahari in 2001, when she was seventeen. Her ‘crime’ was attending a candlelight vigil in Tehran that commemorated the victims of 9/11. Since then, she’s taught Iranian homeless children and Afghan refugees' children. In 2006, after she became the…

Spies, Passports, andThe Guardian

July 17, 2010 · Michael Weiss, Blog

When Hamas commander Mahmoud al-Mabhouh was assassinated in Dubai last January, and his cause of death later ascribed to foul play, it didn’t take long before the British press found itself the beneficiary of a troika of good copy. First, al-Mabhouh’s end had been delivered by the injection of a…

Sincerity with a Motive

November 20, 2008 · Michael Weiss, Blog

"What's it about?" a no-nonsense undergraduate once inquired of the author of The Adventures of Augie March. "It's about 200 pages too long," Saul Bellow replied. This anecdote came rushing back to me as I scanned the numerous obituaries and literary remembrances of David Foster Wallace, who hanged…

Resisting Iran

September 26, 2008 · Michael Weiss, Blog

THERE WERE TWO separate rallies taking place at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, on 1st Avenue, Tuesday, to mark the second day of protests of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit to the United Nations. Both consisted of Iranian-Americans calling attention to the grave human rights atrocities perpetrated by the…

Losing It

September 17, 2008 · Blog, Michael Weiss

As bellwethers of liberal demoralization about this election go, I've not yet come across anything so clanging as the following comment from Hannah Rosin, responding to the phenomenon of Sarah Palin: "One of my many depressed Obama-supporting friends suggests a tidy solution: Repeal the 19th…

Forty Years On

September 8, 2008 · Magazine, Michael Weiss, Books and Arts

Not long ago in the London Times, Tom Stoppard published an essay that surely had most of his West End friends wincing. Titled "1968: The year of the posturing rebel," it was a look back in "embarrassment" at the spectacle of anti-establishment consensus 40 years ago, and an attempt to hoist a…

Waugh Contra Mundum

August 21, 2008 · Michael Weiss, Blog

THE NEW FILM ADAPTATION of Brideshead Revisited has forced Evelyn Waugh's most celebrated novel upon popular culture again, and popular culture has suffered enough. This time the chorus is one of sorrow and anger over the transformation of a work of art into a dangled period piece around which swim…

Little Soso

March 10, 2008 · Magazine, Michael Weiss, Books and Arts

Young Stalin

Russia's Regression

January 31, 2008 · Michael Weiss, Blog

IT DOESN'T TAKE an Anglophile to appreciate the English way with understatement, particularly at moments of high tension or pique. Readers of the Moscow Times got a slight taste of this national characteristic last Friday, when Mr. Giles Cattermole, a resident of Sonning-on-Thames, wrote in to…

The Law of Succession

December 13, 2007 · Blog, Michael Weiss

IT ALL SEEMS so familiar. Whenever the West expresses optimism about the advent of a Europeanized Russian "liberal" as the head of state, there's a good chance reference will be made to Peter the Great, the man credited with dragging Russia out of the dark ages and founding the pre-Soviet empire.…

Russia's Rigged Election

December 5, 2007 · Blog, Michael Weiss

THE ONLY MAJOR surprise of Russia's parliamentary "election," which could not have been choreographed better by Diaghilev, is that it had even the Communists lamenting the death of democracy. Gennady Zyuganov, chairman of the party, said on Sunday, "We do not trust these figures unveiled by the…

Knight's Move

November 29, 2007 · Blog, Michael Weiss

"NO MATTER WHAT happens, get Kasparov." So shouted one riot officer Saturday during the violently disrupted Dissenters' March in Moscow, according to David Nowak of the Moscow Times, one of the few newspapers left in Russia that doesn't have its reporting redacted by the Kremlin. When Nowak asked…

A Rose by Any Other Name

November 21, 2007 · Michael Weiss, Blog

"It is unpleasant when the state resorts to a force against one part of its population. It was the most difficult decision. Each baton hit on our citizens was also hit on me But chaos and civil confrontation would have been an alternative to this. Georgia has already experienced that and my goal is…

The Cool Peace?

November 7, 2007 · Michael Weiss, Blog

TUESDAY NIGHT MARKED the eleventh Intelligence Squared U.S. debate hosted at the Asia Society and Museum on Park Avenue. Generously endowed by the conservative philanthropist Robert Rosenkranz, IQ2US underwrites a series of intellectual exchanges modeled on the full-blooded forensic style of the…

Unconsummation

August 20, 2007 · Magazine, Michael Weiss, Books and Arts

On Chesil Beach

Man of Letters

June 11, 2007 · Magazine, Michael Weiss, Books and Arts

The Life of Kingsley Amis