Changing the scriptATUL ANEJAAt the end of the day, Hizbollah emerges as the symbol of resistance against the U.S.-Israeli unilateralism in West Asia.
War and solidarityATUL ANEJAThe Lebanese forge a national identity in the face of Israeli aggression and appear determined to bargain for a truce on their terms.
Summer of shellingBY ATUL ANEJAFrom the war zone in Lebanon, an account of the distress and the relief effort.
Show trialATUL ANEJAImpartiality of the Saddam Hussein trial is increasingly questioned because of the active behind-the-scenes role of the United States.
American tragedyATUL ANEJAThree years after the invasion, the U.S. is still far away from achieving its goals in Iraq.
Violence for voteATUL ANEJAAs parliamentary elections approach in Israel, Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert gets tough in Palestine.
The fallout of SamarraATUL ANEJAThe bombing of the Al Askari shrine in Samarra takes Iraq close to a disastrous civil war.
A shift on the streetATUL ANEJAThe absence of credible secular alternatives and the rejectionist stance of the West and Israel will continue to encourage the spread of political Isl
Divided HouseATUL ANEJAThe elections to Iraq's National Assembly, which witnessed heavy polling, produce results that reflect the fractured nature of the polity.
Ominous signalsATUL ANEJA in DubaiThe vote on the draft Constitution in Iraq widens the Sunni-Shia rift and threatens to take the country one step closer to civil war.
A democratic firstATUL ANEJAHosni Mubarak secures Egypt's first democratically elected presidency, but poor voter turnout prompts Opposition parties to question his legitimacy.
A constitutional crisisATUL ANEJAThe Sunnis reject the draft of the new Constitution, upsetting U.S. plans to revive the political process in Iraq and counter the armed resistance.
Are Hindi films problematising history? After Padmaavat, the Hindu historical tasted blood and sharpened its fangs, but the recent Samrat Prithviraj is a weak offspring of the genre, neither
SlideshowPostcards from Khasi hillsImages that mix politics, history and discomfort to document how the Khasi people made Christianity, a “foreign faith”, their own.