say you, say me

Mugs with pictures of President Obama (wearing a keffiyeh), late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Gazan Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh are displayed in a souvenir shop in Gaza City on Tuesday. Full text on mug with Obama’s picture reads “Oh, Abu Hussain, Palestine loves you.” [AP Photo]
From the most Muslim nation on earth, President Barack Obama is reaching out to the Islamic world, declaring that efforts to build trust and peace are showing promise but are still clearly “incomplete.”
Obama on Wednesday will deliver one of the most personal and potentially consequential speeches of his presidency, reflecting on his own years of upbringing in Indonesia and giving an update on America’s “new beginning” with Muslims that he promised last year in Cairo.
At the same time, the path to lasting peace in the Middle East was hardly looking smoother. A reminder of that difficult road was waiting for Obama when he landed here Tuesday on a steamy afternoon in southeast Asia.
Israel’s decision to build more apartments in east Jerusalem, a disputed territory claimed by Palestinians, had already earned a rebuke from American diplomats before a tired, traveling president [awww...] weighed in himself.
“This kind of activity is never helpful when it comes to peace negotiations.”
