FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “bombings”

Showing 1 - 10 of 20

OPINION

When films speak louder than missiles

Oped, Kong Rithdee, Published on 26/06/2025

» Jafar Panahi tells it as he sees it: "An attack on my homeland, Iran, is in no way acceptable," the Iranian filmmaker wrote on Instagram last week. "Israel has violated Iran and should be tried in an international trial as a war aggressor."

OPINION

US strikes on Iran nuke plants risk backfiring

Oped, Brahma Chellaney, Published on 26/06/2025

» Israel and the United States have dealt punishing blows to Iran's nuclear infrastructure. "Operation Rising Lion" and "Operation Midnight Hammer" have been portrayed as precision strikes that will stop the Islamic Republic's nuclear programme in its tracks. But whatever the bombings might have achieved tactically, they risk forfeiting strategically, as Iran is now more convinced than ever that nuclear weapons are the only way to deter future aggression and ensure the regime's survival.

OPINION

Time for Thai govt, BRN to talk

Oped, Matt Wheeler, Published on 12/03/2025

» Dialogue between the Thai government and Malay separatists marked its 12-year anniversary on Feb 28, but violence in the southernmost provinces remains an open wound on the Thai body politic. A dreadful routine of bombings, shootings and clashes in these provinces has killed some 7,680 people since 2004, yet the simmering violence goes largely unnoticed outside the region.

OPINION

Thailand's tense dance of diplomacy

Oped, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 04/03/2025

» Last Thursday evening, Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Phumtham Wechayachai showed his true colours when he addressed the repatriation of 40 Uyghurs to China. Cool as a cucumber, he spoke with authority yet with an apologetic tone. That day's press conference was his perfect coda; other cabinet ministers were mere decorative artefacts.

OPINION

Return nameless victims to heal tsunami wounds

Oped, Alan Morison, Published on 26/12/2024

» A leader of the team that identified thousands of victims of the 2004 tsunami now believes that Interpol's 99.9% certainty rule should be adapted out of compassion to try to reunite the remaining 380 nameless victims with their families. Twenty years on, the full story behind the huge detective saga in Thailand that gave names back to thousands of victims of the 2004 tsunami is being told for the first time.

OPINION

Will he? Won't he? What will Netanyahu do?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 01/10/2024

» Will Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, really launch a full-scale war against Lebanon-based Hezbollah when Israel is still fighting Hamas in Gaza? Of course he will.

OPINION

'Learn' how to drive

Oped, Postbag, Published on 21/09/2024

» Re: "No justice for Nong Cartoon", (Editorial, Sept 19).

OPINION

The frog, the scorpion and Hamas

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 18/11/2023

» Stop me if you've heard this story before. Or rather, don't, because it's relevant to the current situation, and we have to bring the people who don't know the story up to speed first.

OPINION

The roots of the India-Canada diplomatic spat

Oped, Brahma Chellaney, Published on 07/10/2023

» Rarely have two major democracies descended into as ugly a diplomatic spat as the one now unfolding between Canada and India.

OPINION

Local community key to delivering Myanmar aid

Oped, Charles Petrie, Published on 11/05/2023

» Last month, I undertook a 10-day trip along the Thai-Myanmar border. In part its purpose was to explore further the nature and workings of the local governance structures which Scott Guggenheim and I had argued needed to be supported by the international community in our piece entitled "Taking risk and supporting local governance", published in the Bangkok Post on March 24.