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Search Result for “boat people”

Showing 1 - 8 of 8

OPINION

India election fuels nationalist sentiments

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 19/04/2024

» Extreme nationalism always looks foolish or even deranged to those who have not caught the virus, but in India it's now official.

OPINION

Killing Darya Dugina: Ukraine own-goal?

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 25/08/2022

» 'Iam a political observer of the International Eurasianist Movement and an expert in international relations. In this capacity, I appear on Russian, Pakistani, Turkish, Chinese and Indian television channels. The situation in Ukraine is really an example of a clash of civilisations; it can be seen as a clash between globalist and Eurasian civilisation."

OPINION

Do Russians have war in their blood?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 02/04/2022

» The geopolitical views of my grandmother, Florence O'Driscoll, could have been summed up in seven words: the Germans have war in their blood. Even as a child I suspected that the world must be more complicated than that, but I never contradicted her. She came by those views the hard way.

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OPINION

Coronavirus response reveals China's fatal weakness

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 28/01/2020

» In an emergency, the good thing about a dictatorship is that it can respond very fast. The bad thing is that it won't respond at all until the dictator-in-chief says that it should. All the little dictators who flourish in this sort of system won't risk their positions by passing bad news up the line until the risk of being blamed for delay outweighs the risk of being blamed for the emergency in the first place.

OPINION

Aviation must innovate to stop ‘f lygskam’ fate

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 26/10/2019

» Qantas, the Australian airline, has just test-flown the world’s longest commercial air-route: 16,500km from New York to Sydney non-stop. There were only 60 passengers aboard the Boeing 787, all in business class, because the plane needed to conserve the rest of its weight for fuel. And, we are told, they danced the Macarena in the empty economy class to stay limber during the 19-hour flight.

OPINION

Who is really behind the Gulf tanker attacks?

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 17/06/2019

» The evidence is far from conclusive, but on balance Iran probably is behind the attacks on four oil tankers in the Gulf last month and two more last Thursday. Those attacks carefully avoided human casualties, so if they were Iranian, what was the goal?

OPINION

Jailing the iconoclast of Timbuktu a welcome precedent

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 27/08/2016

» Nobody got punished for blowing up the giant Buddhist statues in Afghanistan's Bamiyan Valley in 2001. Nobody has been sent to jail for blowing up much of the ancient city of Palmyra in Syria after the Islamic State captured it in May 2015. (It was recaptured last March.) But Ahmed al-Mahdi is going to jail for a long time for destroying the religious monuments of Timbuktu, and he even says he's sorry.

OPINION

EU-Turkey migrant deal bound to fail

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 01/04/2016

» Next Monday, the deal made between the European Union and Turkey to stem the flood of refugees into the EU goes into effect. It will promptly blow up in everybody's face, for three reasons.