- English Newsletter 1 June 2026
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Is the United States gearing up for military intervention in Cuba? That's the question posed by co-authors William M. Leogrande and Peter Kornbluh, writing for Al Majalla earlier in the week.
Before his next war, US President Donald Trump has to extricate himself from the last, his attack against Iran, which has driven up energy prices. Pakistan is helping his resolve it, as Kamal Alam explains.
A big factor is wars starting and ending seems to come down to the negotiating style of the world's most powerful man. Brian Katulis looks at Mr Trump's sound-and-fury diplomacy, asking whether it works or not.
On a related note, there certainly seems to be some personal chemistry between Trump and Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa, but as Haid Haid notes, bilateral relations need to be put on a stronger, more permanent footing.
Staying on Syria, Alia Mansour has noticed that there is a concerted campaign to drag the new Syrian government into Lebanon's squabbling, back-stabbing politics. So far, al-Sharaa and Co. have wisely distanced themselves.
Not far away, Israel's far-right government may sense that now is the time to claim sovereignty over the West Bank, given the sorry state of Palestine's leadership in Ramallah. Malek al-Athamna shows how this is a Jordanian problem.
Another opinion writer taking a historical view this week is Ibrahim Hamidi, who compares the Suez Crisis of 1956 with the US-Iran War of 2026. Both involved strategic waterways that carry much of the world's trade.
Talking of history, Yasmin Abdallah this week writes about the mahmal, a ceremonial passenger-less camel litter covered with intricately embroidered textiles that accompanied historic Hajj pilgrimage caravans of sultans' wives.
Elsewhere is our culture section, Mona Shukri interviews the Jordanian short story writer Rashed Issa about his latest work and how he condenses words, not meaning.
In Business, Marcelle Nasr looks at Egypt's livestock markets, asking how inflation and geopolitical tension has driven up Eid sacrifice costs in a country that can ill afford any further cost-of-living rises.
Across the Atlantic, Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney has had a turbulent first year in the job, facing American threats and tariffs. Abdulfattah Khattab reviews the new man's last 12 months.
And finally, another American neighbour was in the news recently. Raul Castro, Cuba's 95-year-old former president and brother of Fidel, was indicted in the United States over an incident 30 years ago. Stefanie Butendieck-Hijerra looks at the quieter sibling who built Cuba's armed forces.
Is the US on the verge of military intervention in Cuba?
Seizing Castro could prove more costly and less effective than the capture of Maduro
Politics
Pakistan keeps chasing an elusive deal between the US and Iran
There are elements of a more permanent ceasefire agreement that Islamabad can control, contrive, or consult on, but others are beyond its grasp.
Politics
Trump’s sound-and-fury diplomacy produces unclear outcomes
Sabre-rattling social media statements are par for the course with the US president, whose performative declarations keep everyone guessing, but do they produce lasting results?
Why Syria-US ties cannot rely on leaders’ personal chemistry
Donald Trump and Ahmed al-Sharaa have formed a good relationship which has helped Syria immensely, but Trump's term ends in 2028, so institutional relations are now a priority.
Haid HaidWhy some are trying to pull Syria into Lebanon’s crises
Alia MansourWhen the Palestinian vacuum becomes a Jordanian question
Malek Al AthamnaSuez and Hormuz: more intersections than we think
Ibrahim Hamidi
Culture & Social Affairs
The extravagant Hajj caravans of the sultans’ wives
Through extravagant processions led by palace women, the Mamluk state projected a message of power and prestige at home and abroad, turning the Hajj obligation into a soft-power tool
Culture & Social Affairs
Rashed Issa on the sifting, sieving, and refining for short stories
Jordanian writer tells Al Majalla how he condenses language but not semantics, and where he takes his inspiration from.
Business & Economy
How inflation and politics drove up Eid sacrifices costs in Egypt
Rising prices, dollar pressures, and Red Sea disruption are making Eid al-Adha increasingly unaffordable, exposing Egypt's dependence on imports and deepening concerns over food security
Business & Economy
Mark Carney’s first year: rebuilding Canada amid crisis and tariffs
Faced with tariffs and geopolitical instability, Canada's prime minister has responded with state-backed investment, energy pragmatism, and a push for economic independence
Raúl Castro: the soldier who made Fidel’s revolution endure
Fidel's brother built Cuba's armed forces and took over the presidency when his more charismatic sibling fell ill two decades ago. A recent US indictment from a 1996 incident now asks new questions.