Editor in Chief | Sami Moubayed |
---|---|
Staff writers | Ruba Saqer, Mehdi Rifai |
Categories | Newsmagazine |
Frequency | Monthly |
Circulation | 12,000 monthly |
Publisher | Abdulsalam Haykal |
First issue | 5 January 2007 |
Final issue | November 2011 |
Company | Haykal Media |
Country | Syria |
Based in | Damascus |
Language | English |
Forward Magazine was a Syrian English-language newsmagazine published monthly in Damascus existed from January 2007 to November 2011.[1]
It was the first private English-language periodical to be licensed in Syria since all private media was nationalized by Gamal Abdel Nasser in 1958 during the short-lived Syrian-Egyptian union. The magazine started in January 2007 with the motto, "The Only Way is Forward." In December 2009, Forward Launched its digital edition in collaboration with Pressmart Media.
History
Forward was founded by media and technology entrepreneur Abdulsalam Haykal. The first edition appeared on 28 December. According to a statement on the magazine's website, Forward was built "on the firm conviction that the only way is forward in Syria and other options do not exist." While the magazine claimed to be "the only balanced, local, and reliable source of information on Syria in the English language," some observers dubbed it as "pro-regime."[2]
The magazine was able to attract several leading media figures as contributors including David Ignatius of The Washington Post, Hala Gorani of CNN, and Riz Khan of al-Jazeera. It featured exclusive interviews with international figures including former US President Jimmy Carter, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, and Syria's First Lady Asma al-Assad.
The magazine established its own blog, Untold Damascene Stories, with its own writers as the blog's contributors.
The funding for this magazine is dubious. Its editorial line is parallel to that of U.S. foreign policy in almost every aspect. Its entry in the news dissemination market coincided with attempts by the U.S. to penetrate into Syria once independent news publications were permitted in 2007.
In order to achieve a measure of credibility, it assumed at times a mildly critical evaluation of US policies, particularly that towards Israel, but once that established, it began to gnaw at the foundation of Syria's political culture, by citing and rewriting the bloody history and lamenting the demise of important CIA operatives like Husni Al-Zaim who led a coup d'état which toppled the democratically elected government and replaced it for some six years with an array of CIA-controlled colonels.
American focus
Forward Magazine had an American focus in its coverage of international affairs, and was supportive of Barack Obama's election. It was critical of the American President's dealings with Israel, warning that US policy towards nuclear nations would allow Israel to have a hand in future terror attacks against the United States. It also stated that Israel was behind the murder of Rafic Hariri but Obama, not wanting to not alienate Jewish voters, refused to allow special tribunals to consider Israel as a suspect but instead maintain focus on only Hizbollah and Syria.
One of Forward's regular contributors was Imad Moustapha, Syria's Ambassador to the United States. In April 2007, Forward ran an article by US Institute of Peace specialist Scott Lasensky on "How to move the Syria-American relations forward?" In June 2007, another piece by Hind Kabawat stressed a similar notion of how cultural exchange can be a tool for better relations between Syria and the US. In August 2007, Imad Moustapha gave an interview for Forward Magazine in which he stated about the American government: "I don’t spare them and they don’t spare me. It is a fair game."
In November 2008, Forward ran the headline: "To our American readers" on its front cover. The 14-page series of articles and photographs denounced the American strike on Abu Kamal, a city in North-eastern Syria, and depicted blood-stained concrete from the attack site.[3] Earlier in July 2008, Forward ran a story by the American writer Scott C. Davis on "What Michelle Obama can learn from Asma al-Assad." In December 2008, Forward ran a series of articles to mark the election of Barack Obama as next president of the United States. The front-cover headline was: "Obamania sweeps away Bushism." The edition included a section titled "10 Syrian Christmas wishes to Obama." Forward featured an interview also with Ambassador Edward Djerejian, head of the James Baker Institute at Rice University.
In March 2008, Forward published an editorial by one of its contributors, T. Hariri, that addresses Obama and what he refers to as "the Bush era:"
The politics of 9-11 would continue to ripple the American fabric through the duration of the near decade of the markedly reactionary Bush era. It was an episode in the theater of American politics whose deliberate policies revealed a reckless abandon: a political-cum-cultural movement retrograde to the American ideals that have always been embedded in potential, and bolstered by historical beginnings, not ends.
Editorial board, publisher, and contributors
Forward Magazine was edited by Syrian historian and writer Sami Moubayed, an author of books, who reports on Syrian affairs with regular contributions to Asia Times, Gulf News, and PostGlobal. In July 2008, he was part of the unofficial Syrian delegation to the United States whose request to meet officials at the State Department was turned down. Together with the other two members of the group, Moubayed was described as a "regime-sanctioned mouthpiece."[4]
The magazine was published by Haykal Media, which also produced Syria's business bi-weekly Aliqtisadi and the lifestyle monthly Happynings. The company was also involved in online media. The magazine officers as stated on their website were:
- Abdulsalam Haykal, Publisher, CEO of Haykal Media
- Sami Moubayed, PhD, Editor in Chief, VP Haykal Media
- Ammar Haykal, VP Operations, Haykal Media
Contributors to Forward Magazine included:
- Scott C. Davis, Seattle-based freelance journalist and founder of Cune Press
- Ibrahim Hamidi, senior editor at the Arabic-language daily Al-Hayat
- T. Hariri, American essayist, critic, columnist, and poet; editor of The Rome Review
- David Ignatius, Washington Post associate editor and columnist
- Sami Khiyami, Ambassador of Syria to the United Kingdom
- David W. Lesch, Professor at Trinity University, author of Syrian president Bashar Al-Assad's biography The New Lion of Damascus: Bashar al-Assad and Modern Syria,
- Imad Moustapha, Ambassador of Syria to the United States.
References
- ↑ "Forward Syria". November 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-08-06. Retrieved 2022-04-05.
- ↑ Tabler, Andrew J. (2008-11-06). "Damascus' ten demands to receive Obama". The Eighth Gate. Archived from the original on 2021-05-07. Retrieved 2022-04-05.
- ↑ Starr, Stephen (2008-12-11). "Hit the road, Damascus tells Americans". Asia Times. ISSN 1025-7780. Archived from the original on 2008-12-11. Retrieved 2022-04-05.
- ↑ Badran, Tony (2008-07-23). "Landis Gets the Memo from Imad Moustapha". Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Archived from the original on 2021-12-17. Retrieved 2022-04-05.
External links
- "Untold Damascene Stories". 2010-08-03. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12. Retrieved 2022-04-05.