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The Taliban’s religious roadmap for Afghanistan
Photo by MOHD RASFAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Taliban’s religious roadmap for Afghanistan

    After a grueling 20-year campaign, America concluded its war in Afghanistan where it started: with the Taliban in charge. But this isn’t your father’s Taliban. In recognition of their need for a firmer ideological base and their desire to establish a purely Islamic system, the Taliban rulers are gradually putting together the framework for their new ideological state. They are enacting three closely intertwined ideological initiatives in order to solidify their rule: fleshing out a state religious ideology, burnishing their “originalist” religious credentials, and channeling Afghan nationalism into religious nationalism. These ongoing efforts, which revolve around the Taliban’s Islamism, provide a preview of how the new rulers intend to interact with temporal political realities by provoking religious reform in order to rule Afghanistan.

    US response options to growing Houthi attacks
    Photo by GIUSEPPE CACACE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • US response options to growing Houthi attacks

    What these attacks and many others in the region have in common is Iran’s irrefutable involvement. They may have different local contexts and their perpetrators, all loyal to Iran, may have different motivations, but every single one of those attacks was possible only because Iran provided either the weapons or the know-how to assemble and use them.

    Confronting climate change, Turkey needs “green” leadership now more than ever
    Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Confronting climate change, Turkey needs “green” leadership now more than ever

    Turkey, like all other countries, is facing the harsh reality of climate change. Last year, it experienced one of the hottest summers on record. Blistering heat waves led to widespread wildfires in the country’s southwest, affecting five times more land than normal during the summer. Though Turkey usually has large water surpluses, some areas experienced shortages due to extreme drought. Others suffered heavy flooding, leaving scores dead.

    January 25, 2022

    Jordan’s strategy for 2022: Bend, don’t break
    Photo by KHALIL MAZRAAWI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Jordan’s strategy for 2022: Bend, don’t break

    On Dec. 23, Jordanian Minister of Industry, Trade, and Supply Yousef Shamali and Russia’s Ambassador to Jordan Gleb Desyatnikov attended a ceremony to finalize a bilateral cooperation agreement on science, culture, and education. This agreement highlights Jordan’s delicate foreign policy balancing act. The government, led by King Abdullah II, will continue to work with a diverse group of countries, even those with tense relations with the West, to bolster its security and economic opportunities. Mitigating security threats and increasing business opportunities is key to political stability and the continuation of the king’s rule amid Jordan’s persistent socio-economic problems. However, the king will need to be careful not to undermine his closest allies by working with their adversaries.

    January 25, 2022

    Federal court ruling demonstrates limits of anti-Palestinian “lawfare”
    Photo by Erik McGregor/LightRocket via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Federal court ruling demonstrates limits of anti-Palestinian “lawfare”

    On Jan. 6, 2022, a U.S. district court judge dismissed a lawsuit against the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and the Palestinian Authority (PA) brought by the family of Ari Fuld, a dual U.S.-Israel citizen murdered in 2018 by a Palestinian teenager outside of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank. The ruling demonstrates the strictly political nature of the lawsuit, whereby powerful interests with deep pockets use litigation and lobbying to target the PA’s finances, including foreign aid, in order to hasten its collapse, as well as the limits of this type of “lawfare” against the PA. 

    January 25, 2022

    The attack on al-Sina Prison points to a broader ISIS resurgence
    Photo by AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • The attack on al-Sina Prison points to a broader ISIS resurgence

    Intense fighting between the SDF and ISIS continued for the fifth day in Syria’s northeastern city of al-Hasakeh on Monday, following ISIS’s biggest attack in Syria and Iraq in three years. In the evening of Jan. 20, as many as 200 ISIS militants, many wearing suicide belts, launched a coordinated multi-axis assault on al-Sina Prison, shortly after detonating two car bombs parked along the exterior walls of its northern wing. In the chaos that ensued, SDF vehicles were seized and used to break through secure walls, clearing the way for hundreds of ISIS detainees to escape.

    As Russia demands legal guarantees from the West, is Georgia on anyone’s mind?
    Photo by VANO SHLAMOV/AFP via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • As Russia demands legal guarantees from the West, is Georgia on anyone’s mind?

    As Russia amasses more than 100,000 troops along Ukraine’s borders, the Kremlin is holding the country at gunpoint while imposing outrageous demands on the West. NATO has never attacked Russia, while Moscow has waged wars against Georgia and Ukraine and still occupies their lands and militarizes the Black Sea.

    January 24, 2022

    Afghanistan’s economy: Collapse and chaos
    Photo by Scott Peterson/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Afghanistan’s economy: Collapse and chaos

    On Jan. 13, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed alarm that millions of Afghans are on the “verge of death” thanks to a lethal brew of “freezing temperatures and frozen assets.” This was no idle warning. Notwithstanding the decline in fighting following the Taliban’s victory in August 2021, Afghanistan’s economy is in a deepening spiral of impoverishment and destitution.

    January 21, 2022

    EU-MENA relations: Outlook for 2022
    Photo by Michele Spatari/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • EU-MENA relations: Outlook for 2022

    Going into 2022, many of the main issues that dominated the EU’s relations with the countries of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), from the ongoing talks in Vienna to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal to the conflicts in Syria and Yemen, as well as the uncontrolled influx of migrants from the region and Turkey’s long-stalled membership bid, remain on the agenda. Is the new year likely to see a resolution of any of these issues or any other significant changes in relations between the EU and the countries of the region?

    January 21, 2022

    How involved was Iran in the Houthi attack on the UAE?
    Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • How involved was Iran in the Houthi attack on the UAE?

    Three days have passed since the Houthi attack on the UAE, yet there’s still a lot we don’t know about what really happened. Here’s what we do know: The Houthis officially stated that they were the ones who struck Abu Dhabi, and unlike in September 2019 when they made the same claim, this time they might not be lying. Yet this is not enough to help us answer what in my opinion is the ultimate question: to what extent were the Iranians involved in this attack?

    January 20, 2022

    هجوم الحوثيين على الإمارات
  • Commentary
  • هجوم الحوثيين على الإمارات

    يوم 17 يناير/كانون الثاني، نفذ الحوثيون هجومًا آخر استهدف منشأة نفطية إماراتية في أبوظبي، ما أدى إلى مقتل ثلاثة وافدين، وإلحاق أضرار بالبنية التحتية. ظاهريًا، يبدو أنهم يذكَّرون الإماراتيين بمدى ضعفهم وإمكانية الإضرار بهم إذا استمرت الهجمات ضد مصالح الحوثيين في اليمن. وبحسب ما ورد، كانت وسائل الهجوم عبارة عن طائرات مسيرة، وهي أداة بسيطة غير متماثلة متاحة للكثيرين واستخدمها الحوثيون على نطاق واسع في جميع أنحاء المنطقة. لسوء الحظ فإن القصة هنا قد أصبحت مألوفة للغاية وتتطلب استجابة متسقة الآن. ففي نهاية المطاف، من المرجح أن يتم نسخ وتكرار ما أصبح روتينيًا في الخليج في مواقع أخرى.

    Raisi's shrinking budget cements the Islamic Republic's "trinity"
    Photo by Meghdad Madadi/ATPImages/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Raisi's shrinking budget cements the Islamic Republic's "trinity"

    Iran’s new president, Ebrahim Raisi, has presented his first draft budget bill for the upcoming Iranian year (1401), which starts on March 21, 2022. Rather than facilitating a much-needed economic recovery, the proposed budget is designed to strengthen the regime’s power base and impose austerity while keeping society under control.

    January 20, 2022