At least 20 people are killed when a missile strikes a residential building in Aleppo. (Los Angeles Times)
Lebanon arrests leaders of an Al Qaeda-linked group in connection with the bombing of the Iranian Embassy. (New York Times)
Two people are killed as police and protesters clash in the Egyptian city of Alexandria. (Reuters)
Commentary:
Roger Cohen says Israel's legitimacy as a Jewish state depends on ending the occupation. (New York Times)
Karin Laub says Israel and the Palestinians face hard choices in Kerry's framework proposal. (AP)
Gershon Baskin says Israel needs Kerry and the US even if they don't want to admit it. (Jerusalem Post)
Eitan Haber says Kerry's determination to achieve peace puts Israel in a very difficult quandary. (YNet)
Shlomi Eldar says, despite a prisoner release, more Israeli settlement activity could kill peace talks. (Al Monitor)
David Horovitz tries to imagine what Netanyahu is thinking right now. (Times of Israel)
Tamar Hermann says the Israeli left has to choose between supporting Netanyahu and increasing chances for peace or opposing him and increasing their electoral prospects. (YNet)
Ari Shavit says if Kerry's proposals include a Jewish state in the 1967 borders, it would be a Zionist victory. (Ha'aretz)
Ami Ayalon says Israel needs to take bold unilateral measures to salvage the peace process. (New York Times)
Ha'aretz says Israel should stop using municipal planning as an excuse to seize land and dispossess Palestinians. (Ha'aretz)
Joshua Mitnick interviews Jerusalem expert Daniel Siedemann. (Christian Science Monitor)
Zuher Andrawous says Palestinians are becoming more divided along sectarian lines. (Ha'aretz)
Gideon Levy says Israelis seem to tolerate torture. (Ha'aretz)
Bloomberg profiles Palestinian businessmen Munib R. Masri. (Bloomberg)
Hassan Hassan says Hezbollah's misleading anti-takfiri rhetoric could fool some people. (The National)
Mohammed Habash says radicalized Syrian youths are one of Pres. Assad's greatest assets. (The National)
The National says the Iraqi army offensive in Anbar against Sunni forces will only backfire. (The National)
Michel Kilo says it's time to take a stand against the most extreme rebel group in Syria, ISIS. (Asharq Al Awsat)
Hania Mourtada profiles the Syrian Islamic Front, a potential new Western Islamist ally. (Foreign Policy)
Osama Al Sharif gives his overview on what to expect in the Middle East in 2014. (Jordan Times)
Calder Walton describes how Jewish terrorists in Palestine helped give birth to the British surveillance state. (Foreign Policy)
Greg Carlstrom explains why the Egyptian government is blaming everything it can on the Muslim Brotherhood. (Foreign Policy)
Nathan Brown looks forward to the upcoming Egyptian constitutional referendum. (Carnegie)
Rumors continue to spread of a trade-off between Palestinian recognition of Israel's Jewish character for Israel's recognition of the 1967 borders as the basis for peace. (Times of Israel)
An Israeli ministerial committee approves pending legislation to annex the Jordan Valley. (Xinhua)
Amos Harel says Israel faces dangerous new strategic realities. (Ha'aretz)
Yoel Guzansky says there's a real basis for increased Israeli-Saudi cooperation. (Jerusalem Post)
Kristian Coates Ulrichsen says US-Iranian nuclear talks might be a game changer in US-Israeli relations, but Munira Fakhro thinks otherwise. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Jeremy Bowen says the deepening Sunni-Shiite split bodes ill for the Arab world. (BBC)
Kim Ghattas says the recent assassination of a moderate Lebanese politician shows the country is being dragged into the Syrian conflict. (BBC)
Rami Khouri says the Chatah assassination shows no parts of Lebanon are off-limits in the brewing conflict. (The Daily Star)
Mohamed Abdel Salam says universities are Egypt's new battleground. (The Daily Star)
Oussama Romdhani looks at Tunisia's political transition plan. (Al Monitor)
Hanin Ghaddar says Qatari foreign policy is now at a crossroads. (NOW)
Asharq Al-Awsat interviews Houthi Movement spokesman Ali Al-Bakhiti on the rebellion in Yemen. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Hussein Ibish looks at the resurgence of Al Qaeda in the Syrian war and elsewhere. (NOW)
Samir Salha says the Gülen-Erdoğan split is now a no holds barred confrontation. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The New York Times and Victoria Brittain both remember the late Palestinian psychiatrist and activist Eyad Sarraj. (The New York Times/The Guardian)
Zafrir Rinat says Palestinians tend to hate "nature reserves" in the occupied territories because they find them reserved for settlers. (Ha'aretz)
Michael Ross says boycotting Israeli universities is an attack on academic freedom. (Los Angeles Times)
Lawrence Grossman says calls for academic boycotts against Israel are hypocritical and should be stopped. (JTA)
Henry Siegman says there is no bigotry in anti-Israel boycotts because of the occupation. (Ha'aretz)
George Hishmeh says the BDS movement is gaining ground. (Jordan Times)
Shlomi Eldar says Israeli academics are worried the academic boycott movement could have "a snowball effect." (Al Monitor)
Martin Kramer calls the academic boycott "ridiculous." (Foreign Policy)
The Jerusalem Post says Israel needs to pick its battles and not every critic is an "anti-Semite." (Jerusalem Post)
David Fachler says Israel tried to court Nelson Mandela and other Africans in the 1960s with training and other inducements. (Ha'aretz)
David Horovitz says there is growing evidence the Lockerbie bombing attack was conducted by an extremist Palestinian group tied to Syria. (Times of Israel)
Diana Atallah profiles a Palestinian woman victim of a so-called "honor killing." (The Media Line)
Rami Khouri looks back at three years of Arab uprisings. (Jordan Times)
Eyad Abu Shakra says Iran's efforts at exercising regional hegemony through proxies like Hezbollah is pushing the region to the brink. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Asharq Al-Awsat interviews Lebanon's PM-designate Salam about his unsuccessful attempts to form a government. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The National says clerics are spewing sectarian hate speech and Gulf states have to put an end to it. (The National)
Hasan Tariq Alhasan says GCC states should turn their focus back onto economic integration. (Gulf News)
Kadri Gursel tries to tally the damage done to the government by Turkey's ongoing corruption scandal. (Al Monitor)
Samir Salha says upcoming municipal elections will determine the future of Turkey's ruling AKP and PM Erdoğan (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Mohammad Akef Jamal says April elections in Iraq will be a litmus test for that country's future. (Gulf News)
The Daily Star says the US should listen closely to the legitimate complaints of its Arab allies. (The Daily Star)