Skip to Content

Thomas Blaubach

Graduate Fellow

This individual is a guest contributor. MEI is not able to assist with contact requests.

Thomas Blaubach

Thomas LoCoco Blaubach is a Graduate Fellow with the Cyber Program at MEI and a recent MA graduate at the University of Chicago’s Committee on International Relations. He received his B.A. in International Studies and Political Science, with certificates in Middle Eastern and African Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His research interests include 5G technologies in the context of geostrategic competition and regime use in the Middle East.

The Latest from Thomas Blaubach

Filter by
3 Results
Connecting Beijing’s global infrastructure: The PEACE Cable in the Middle East and North Africa
 Photo by AMELIE HERENSTEIN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Connecting Beijing’s global infrastructure: The PEACE Cable in the Middle East and North Africa

    One of the most ambitious elements of China’s Digital Silk Road is the Pakistan & East Africa Connecting Europe (PEACE) fiber-optic cable. China has long expressed its ambition to connect the greater Middle East, Africa, and Europe with Chinese fiber optics in order to expand its presence in the region, and Beijing now boasts strategic infrastructure assets in geopolitical hotspots, such as the Pakistani port of Gwadar.

    March 7, 2022

    The 5G divide in the Middle East: Further disparity between the Gulf and its neighbors
  • Analysis
  • The 5G divide in the Middle East: Further disparity between the Gulf and its neighbors

    The 5G technology revolution is poised to change society irreversibly in the Middle East. The evolution of the Internet of Things (IoT) powered by 5G networks could prove life-enhancing. Already, the Gulf countries have led the way in adopting 5G technology in the region and the rollout of 5G showcases the Gulf’s new role as a leader in digital technology. Although the Gulf countries have made strides to be global tech leaders, their neighbors in the region seriously lag behind in their abilities to adopt large-scale 5G technology. This disparity will further deepen the divides in development between the Gulf and the rest of MENA. Looking to the future, the Gulf will surely pull ahead as the tech hub of the region, but there are still important benefits for the rest of the region to reap as they slowly adopt next generation technology. 

    May 20, 2021

    Chinese Technology in the Middle East: A Threat to Sovereignty or an Economic Opportunity?
  • Analysis
  • Chinese Technology in the Middle East: A Threat to Sovereignty or an Economic Opportunity?

    Recent moves by Chinese tech giants have raised concerns in Washington about Beijing’s technological outreach to developing nations. To stem the international growth of these companies, the U.S. has discouraged countries from adopting Chinese technologies through efforts like promoting the Clean Network Initiative. Countries across the globe often must choose between Chinese or Western technology, and these choices have broad implications.

    March 23, 2021