3 July, 2011 Article 1. NYT Setting Sail on Gaza’s Sea of Spin Ethan Bronner Article 2. The Daily Beast 5 Lessons of the DSK Affair Bernard-Henri Lévy Article 3. Al-Ahram Weekly New paradigm in Palestine Mahmoud Musa and Awni Sarrif Article 4. Cato Institute The Rest Won't Overcome the West Leon Hadar Article 5. The Japan Times South China Sea: making sense of nonsense Mark Valencia Article 6. Scientific American How the Brain Understands Food and Appetite David Linden Article 1. NYT Setting Sail on Gaza’s Sea of Spin Ethan Bronner July 2, 2011 -- SOME see a parallel with the Exodus, the ship filled with Jewish refugees that tried to break the British blockade of Palestine in 1947 and helped sway world opinion toward Zionism. Others are struck by the insistence on transporting basic aid — food and cement — when it is no longer needed. Still others note the way the Israeli authorities portray the organizers as violent Islamists when most are middle-aged European pacifists. Almost everything about the flotilla stuck in Greece and waiting to challenge Israel’s blockade of Gaza seems to be a parable for something else, part of an unstated effort to recast the Israeli-Palestinian narrative in extreme terms. Instead of helping to clarify what Gaza needs and how it might build a future, the saga has merely brought out the public relations demons on all sides. Ostensibly the 10 or so boats, with several hundred advocates from more than a dozen countries, are trying to take goods to Gaza because of a siege imposed by Israel and Egypt to pressure Hamas, the Islamist ruler there. A year ago a similar flotilla was stopped by the Israeli Navy, and after commandos boarded and scuffles ensued, nine activists were killed. The international outrage that followed helped force an easing of the siege. One result, largely unacknowledged by the flotilla leaders: far more goods have gone into Gaza over the past year, and while the 1.6 mill