If you read the coverages and interviews (and the highl-level talks in the related commentary sections) in Michael J. Tottens blog, you will learn more about the Middle East and it's related conflicts than from all so called middle-east-experts (in Germany they proudly call themselves 'Nahostexperten') and so called analysis in TV and common newspapers and magazines altogether.
Michael J. Totten in his own words:
For example, learn something about Israel based on a talk between Michael and Benjamin Kerstein:
MJT: So what’s it like to read about Israel in the foreign press?Benjamin Kerstein: Surreal.
MJT: How so?
Benjamin Kerstein: It rarely bears any resemblance to the country I live in, mainly because it either deals only with the conflict or because the news is produced by people who live in the English-speaking Jerusalem bubble.
MJT: Tell me about the English-speaking Jerusalem bubble.
Benjamin Kerstein: There’s a large population of English speakers in Jerusalem. The people who speak English tend to gather around each other, especially if they’re in the higher reaches of government or the media. They tend to hang out with other English-speaking people. They go to the places where such people congregate, they read English-language newspapers, and they watch English-language television. They have very little contact with the rest of Israel, which is predominantly Hebrew-speaking. Tel Aviv is quite cosmopolitan, but if you go to the development towns in the south or to the towns in the north and in the Galilee, there are Hebrew-speaking and Arabic-speaking populations there. Journalists have almost no contact with this world. What they portray as Israeli is a corner of a corner of a corner of this country. So when we read about Israel in the foreign press—especially if we know about the English-speaking bubble in Jerusalem, or if we’ve ever dealt with the media in Jerusalem—we recognize almost instantly the same themes over and over and over again. All you usually get is the view of a closed subculture, which is not even interesting in my opinion.
MJT: A lot of these journalists don’t even socialize with English-speaking Israelis. I know they don’t because I’ve met some of them. I know who they hang out with and how disconnected they are. They hang out with each other and with other foreigners. That strikes me as bizarre because almost all my friends here are Israelis. Likewise, most of my friends in Lebanon are Lebanese.
> The greatest collection of nightmares on earth
And, last but not least, if you have some Euros or Dollars or whatever left, please donate for him on his site, so that his independent, well grounded and valuable work will go on!

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