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Iceland and Lebanon...Together at Last

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  • Iceland and Lebanon...Together at Last

    IcelandReview, Iceland
    Oct 7 2005
    X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
    X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 -- ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

    Iceland and Lebanon...Together at Last



    Last night over dinner, I finally convinced a couple of friends to
    sign on to a shamelessly geeky scheme called, for lack of something
    more creative, Country of the Month. The idea sprung from a
    conversation about the Russian Revolution - or watching BBC food. Not
    sure. Either way, something made me think it was high time to do
    something about the gaping holes in my understanding of world
    history. The rough idea is to take a country and study its food,
    literature, art, and history for a month with a few friends. (I'm
    getting embarrassed, so I'm not going to go on.) Needless to say, it
    was not met with much initial enthusiasm.

    Iceland and Lebanon - I'm getting there. Last night, my plan gained
    legitimacy when we chose two countries: Turkey and Armenia. Given
    that Turkey will likely be one of the next countries to be welcomed
    into the ever growing fold of the EU, the neighbors were a natural
    choice. Let the Turkish coffee flow.

    Meanwhile, Iceland remains unconvinced. And, as it turns out, so does
    Lebanon. Lebanon has recently been wooed by the EU, which has pledged
    its support for the small nation's recent political and economic
    reforms along with 10 million Euros. Much like Turkey, Lebanon is
    probably seen as gateway into the Muslim world for Western countries,
    including the United States.

    But like Iceland, Lebanon is not jumping up and down to join. So this
    week, academics from the two countries met at a university in Beirut
    to talk about what a small nation on the edge of a growing political
    alliance is to do. The difference, as Lebanon's Daily Star points
    out, is that Iceland has economic reasons for not joining, while
    Lebabnon is divided on whether it thinks of itself as part of the
    European world, or part of the Arab one.

    Anyway, interesting to see a how growing political force forms
    alliances between smaller ones. Maybe Lebanon should be next on my
    list.


    http://www.icelandreview.com/icelandreview/daily_life/?cat_id=16539&ew_0_a_id=159539
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