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Bridging the Cost Gap: Three Labor Policies to Close the Wage Gap Between Saudi and Foreign Labor
Photo by FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • Bridging the Cost Gap: Three Labor Policies to Close the Wage Gap Between Saudi and Foreign Labor

    Since the launch of Vision 2030 six years ago, Saudi Arabia has made considerable progress in reducing the labor-cost gap between national and foreign workers in the private sector. While the total unemployment rate has declined recently among nationals, it remains high at 11%. Drawing on evidence from Bahrain’s experience with labor market reform, this can be significantly reduced through policies designed to bridge the cost gap between citizens and foreign labor in the private sector.

    June 15, 2022

    Turkey: A new emerging gas player with resources and infrastructure
    Photo by Mustafa Kamaci/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Turkey: A new emerging gas player with resources and infrastructure

    With its recent deepwater exploration success in the Black Sea and prominent geographic location for interregional hydrocarbon pipelines, Turkey can play a material role in shaping the geopolitical landscape today, especially in the natural gas sector. The country will face a strategic conundrum, whether to utilize newly discovered gas resources entirely for domestic needs and thereby reduce gas imports that come with political baggage as well as foreign currency expenditures, or export gas to capture foreign revenue that Ankara desperately needs.

    June 15, 2022

    Iraq once again leaps into the void, but not before political elites secure funding
    Photo by Iraqi Parliament Press Office/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iraq once again leaps into the void, but not before political elites secure funding

    For Iraqis, two key events last week will shape the rest of this year, but hopefully not many more to come. First, on June 8 the divided parliament voted in surprising harmony to pass the so-called “Food Security and Development Bill,” a controversial piece of legislation with a $17 billion price tag. Second, this was followed, almost overnight on June 9, by a call from firebrand populist Shi’a cleric Muqtada al-Sadr to lawmakers loyal to his movement to “prepare their resignations.” On June 12, the 73 MPs of the Sadrist Movement tendered their resignations, and Iraq leapt even deeper into the void of political uncertainty.

    June 14, 2022

    Pahlavi address highlights growing disillusionment with Iran’s leadership and the search for alternatives
    Photo by NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pahlavi address highlights growing disillusionment with Iran’s leadership and the search for alternatives

    The June 3 address by Reza Pahlavi, son of the last shah, to the people of Iran was bad news for Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. In his live televised speech, Reza Pahlavi made several accusations against the current leadership of Iran, and judging from their reaction, it has put Iranian officials on edge.

    June 14, 2022

    Looking to the skies: The growing interest in cloud seeding technology in the Gulf
    Main Image Credit: Courtesy of NCMA/GN Archives
  • Analysis
  • Looking to the skies: The growing interest in cloud seeding technology in the Gulf

    In response to water shortages exacerbated by population growth and climate change, an increasing number of countries have invested in weather modification technologies over the past decade, including precipitation enhancement, or cloud seeding. The UAE has been a leader in exploring this technology within the arid Gulf region, launching a cloud seeding program in 2002.

    June 13, 2022

    Amid dust storms and drought, Turkey and Iran are at odds over transboundary water management
    Photo by MORTEZA JABERIAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Amid dust storms and drought, Turkey and Iran are at odds over transboundary water management

    Water is slowly emerging as yet another potential cause for dispute between Ankara and Tehran. As of late, the two neighboring states have been at loggerheads over a number of issues, including Syria and Iraq, where they have opposing interests. After years of quiet diplomatic juggling, the issue of transboundary water management is gradually taking center stage in the two countries’ relations, a development that could, in the medium run, have serious repercussions for regional security.

    June 13, 2022

    Morocco counters Russia’s weaponization of the food-energy nexus
    Photo by Edwin Remsberg/VWPics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Morocco counters Russia’s weaponization of the food-energy nexus

    After 100 days of war in Ukraine on Europe’s eastern flank, a critical new front has opened on Europe’s southern flank with the food crisis in Africa. As Europe faces a two-front, geo-economic war of attrition with Russia, Morocco’s plan to increase its fertilizer output by nearly 70% changes the strategic equation by countering Moscow’s ability to weaponize the food-energy nexus. In so doing, Morocco has demonstrated its increasing importance as a geopolitical partner for Europe and the United States in Sub-Saharan Africa.

    Pakistan’s political crisis and the imperatives of economic reform
    Photo by AAMIR QURESHI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan’s political crisis and the imperatives of economic reform

    Beyond short-term austerity measures, Pakistan’s current federal and provincial governments need to push forward essential reforms — including in agriculture, energy, and local governance — that are key to ensuring the country’s political and economic stability and long-term growth prospects.

    June 10, 2022

    The impact of the war in Ukraine on regional cooperation in the South Caucasus
    Photo by FRANCOIS WALSCHAERTS/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The impact of the war in Ukraine on regional cooperation in the South Caucasus

    Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the South Caucasus has been unable to find a model for regional cooperation or form regional organizations. The relative calm that followed the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, especially after the signing of the November 2020 cease-fire agreement, renewed hopes that this might change. Significant challenges to regional cooperation remain, however, and Russia’s war with Ukraine has only complicated matters further.

    June 8, 2022

    Another blow for the unsteady Israeli coalition government
    Photo by GIL COHEN-MAGEN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Another blow for the unsteady Israeli coalition government

    On June 6 Israel’s coalition government lost an important vote, in which more than half of the Knesset members on both sides voted against their own most fundamental beliefs in a desperate effort to either bring down the coalition or to save it. The substance of the legislation was barely more than a pretext, but the opposition smelled blood and was willing to do virtually anything to regain power.

    June 7, 2022

    A country in free fall, a corruptocracy in full swing: Why a building collapse in Iran matters
    Photo by TASNIM NEWS/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • A country in free fall, a corruptocracy in full swing: Why a building collapse in Iran matters

    On May 23, 2022, Metropol tower, a 10-story commercial building in the city of Abadan in Iran’s oil-rich southwestern Khuzestan Province, collapsed, killing at least 41 people and trapping dozens more beneath the rubble. For an outside observer, this might seem like a tragic but random accident that could have happened anywhere. In reality, it is a stark illustration of a country mired in corruption and mismanagement.

    June 7, 2022

    Why Washington should provide direct cash payments to the Lebanese army
    Photo by PATRICK BAZ/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Why Washington should provide direct cash payments to the Lebanese army

    The considerable financial shortfall experienced by the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) over the past couple of years has measurably affected its morale, readiness, and operational capacity. There couldn’t be a worse time for the LAF to potentially fall apart. A series of monumental challenges await Lebanon now that the parliamentary elections are over, all of which demand a modicum of stability that only the LAF can provide.

    June 6, 2022

    US-Saudi relations bend but don’t break
    Photo by FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • US-Saudi relations bend but don’t break

    Partnering is a practical necessity for both countries but need not come at the cost of abandoning core values. The U.S. continues to exercise significant leverage and its own interests are better served globally by demonstrating credibility in what it stands for and reliability in its commitments. The U.S.-Saudi relationship has ample room to bend before it risks breaking.

    June 6, 2022

    Iran’s drone factory in Tajikistan
    Photo by Iranian Army/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran’s drone factory in Tajikistan

    On May 17, 2022, Iran inaugurated a drone factory in neighboring Tajikistan, its first drone production facility abroad. With this factory, Iran intends to reinforce bilateral relations and reduce recent tensions with Tajikistan, address shared security concerns on the Afghan border, boost profits in a growing export market, and complicate Israeli efforts to further sabotage its drone program.

    June 3, 2022

    Syria’s eastern factions unite in the Liberation and Construction Movement: A conversation with the leadership
    Photo from LCM Twitter account, https://twitter.com/LBM_SY/status/1498002819114283009
  • Analysis
  • Syria’s eastern factions unite in the Liberation and Construction Movement: A conversation with the leadership

    Following a series of reshuffles within the Syrian National Army (SNA), a Turkey-supported alliance of armed opposition groups in northern Syria, four armed groups with roots in Syria’s eastern provinces, Ahrar al-Sharqiya, Jaish al-Sharqiya, the 20th Division, and Suqur al-Sham’s eastern affiliate, announced the formation of the Liberation and Construction Movement (LCM) on Feb. 15, 2022. On April 25, 2022, the author held a four-hour conversation with the LCM’s leadership to discuss its genesis and ambitions, the issue of human rights violations, and the alleged incorporation of former ISIS members. In addition to providing the LCM’s perspectives on the Syrian conflict and its own role as a military, political, and societal actor, this conversation serves as a useful starting point for reflecting on the politics of humanitarian aid and predominant Western approaches to dealing with conflict parties such as the LCM.

    June 2, 2022