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Research & Commentary Results

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Power sector reforms are new Lebanese governments’ ultimate test
Photo by DYLAN COLLINS/AFP via Getty Images
  • التحليل
  • Power sector reforms are new Lebanese governments’ ultimate test

    The formation of a new government in Lebanon — after more than a year of political deadlock and amid an economic crisis of dizzying severity — is a positive development. The scale of Lebanon’s economic challenges, however, requires a new government capable of breaking with its predecessors’ deliberate inaction. It necessitates strong and genuine political leadership, will, and action to tackle the country’s many pressing challenges, especially in its dysfunctional energy sector.

    September 27, 2021

    No, Iron Dome doesn’t save Palestinian lives
    Photo by ANAS BABA/AFP via Getty Images
  • التحليل
  • No, Iron Dome doesn’t save Palestinian lives

    While much of the discourse surrounding the Iron Dome controversy is mired in hysterics and hyperbole, some have put forward a more rational case for providing additional funding for it. One of the standard arguments advanced in recent days is that Iron Dome is crucial not only for saving Israeli lives but is equally important (perhaps even more so) for saving Palestinian lives. This claim has been echoed by numerous American and Israeli analysts and even Members of Congress, and seems to have been accepted by a number of journalists as well. But is it actually true?

    September 24, 2021

    The consequences of Lebanon’s constitutional crisis
    Photo by Valery SharifulinTASS via Getty Images
  • التحليل
  • The consequences of Lebanon’s constitutional crisis

    Lebanon is currently facing an unprecedented constitutional crisis that, if left to simmer, will further worsen the country’s numerous predicaments. Three decades after the Ta’if Agreement that ended the 1975-90 war, officials and warlords failed to implement a real reconciliation that could usher in civil order in a country known for its intrinsic vulnerabilities. Although a diverse society, Lebanon has always suffered from inherent political contradictions and currently agonizes over — among other calamities — major constitutional and political crises that, even though they are engulfed by crumbling socio-economic conditions, remain far more threatening than most imagine. How can the Lebanese put an end to such ongoing deterioration? And can Lebanon’s “business-political” class resolve some of the many crises confronting the country?

    September 20, 2021

    East Med gas needs clean tech and regional integration to support investment case
    Photo by Athanasios Gioumpasis/Getty Images
  • التحليل
  • East Med gas needs clean tech and regional integration to support investment case

    The viability of Eastern Mediterranean natural gas resources has long been a source of debate for reasons including cost considerations, market demand, and regional geopolitical tensions. The past couple of years have further complicated the debate, introducing new questions about the role of these resources in supporting post-pandemic economic recovery or helping more advanced markets achieve net-zero policies by replacing coal and other fuel sources (a particularly relevant topic of debate given Europe and Asia are key export targets for East Med gas).

    September 14, 2021

    Baghdad, Beirut, and the politics of Lebanon’s power crisis
    الصورة من وكالة فرانس برس عبر غيتي إيمدجز
  • التحليل
  • Baghdad, Beirut, and the politics of Lebanon’s power crisis

    On July 24, Beirut and Baghdad signed a governmental framework agreement under which Iraq pledged 1 million tons of heavy fuel oil to Lebanon over a full year.

    September 7, 2021

    Hezbollah, America, and the race to supply Lebanon with power
    Photo by DYLAN COLLINS/AFP via Getty Images
  • التحليل
  • Hezbollah, America, and the race to supply Lebanon with power

    Amid typical governmental absenteeism, Hezbollah’s Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah announced on Aug. 19 that the party had secured fuel shipments from Iran. He asserted that the first of many fuel tankers would set sail to Lebanon that same day. Hours later, U.S. ambassador to Lebanon Dorothy Shea declared that the U.S. was working closely with Egypt, Jordan, and the World Bank to find solutions to Lebanon’s crippling fuel shortages. Shea’s comments imply a U.S. willingness to loosen Caesar Act restrictions that would otherwise prevent Lebanon from importing natural gas and electricity through Syria from Egypt and Jordan respectively. The two announcements have been in the making for weeks, but both come at a time when Lebanon’s physical and human infrastructure is crumbling in the absence of essential fuel supplies and energy sources.

    August 20, 2021

    Lebanon is a tinderbox, and Lebanese politicians have started dropping matches
    Photo by Sam Tarling/Getty Images
  • تعليق
  • Lebanon is a tinderbox, and Lebanese politicians have started dropping matches

    Premeditated political paralysis and the absence of economic leadership have brought Lebanon to its knees. Critical infrastructure has collapsed. Reliable electricity and safe water provision are rare. Hospitals and medical services are crippled by the lack of power, medications, and supplies. Food security is at risk for the majority of the population. Desertions from the ranks of security forces are growing. A nationwide security collapse is increasingly likely. The humanitarian collapse is already here.

    August 19, 2021

    The race to reset the Middle East's maritime map
    Photo by Xinhua/Wu Lu via Getty Images
  • التحليل
  • The race to reset the Middle East's maritime map

    One of the most consequential changes in the Middle East’s geopolitical map is happening at the water’s edge. Along the entire eastern rim of the Mediterranean basin, global and regional actors are engaging in a spate of port capacity expansions, new private port construction, and the sell-off of major state-owned ports that will determine who sits atop the region’s global trade flows for decades to come. The international competition to rebuild Beirut’s port is one key puzzle piece in this larger process that is reconfiguring the Levant’s maritime commercial architecture and, as a consequence, the geopolitical contours of the Middle East.

    The possibility that the Lebanese government could opt for China to reconstruct Beirut’s port has raised alarm in Washington and European capitals given China’s already outsized commercial port presence in Egypt, Israel, and Greece. Increased Chinese involvement in Lebanon’s port operations could consolidate Beijing’s hold over the commercial connectivity architecture of the Levant. Re-orienting global commercial flows between Europe, the Middle East, and Asia according to Beijing’s priorities would make China’s Belt and Road Initiative a dominant organizing principle in the international relations of the Middle East. The most effective way to offset China’s ambition may be to facilitate Mediterranean rivals France and Turkey to jointly rebuild Beirut’s port.

    Facing the abyss: Refugees and the Beirut port explosion one year later
    Photo by Marwan Naamani/picture alliance via Getty Images.
  • التحليل
  • Facing the abyss: Refugees and the Beirut port explosion one year later

    On the first anniversary of the catastrophic explosion at the Beirut port last August, Lebanon is threatened by political discord and economic collapse. The past year has been difficult for the average Lebanese citizen and it has been even worse for the country’s most marginalized communities. The ripple effects of the overlapping political, economic, and health crises have pushed the vast majority of refugees and migrant workers into extreme poverty. These communities now stand on the edge of the abyss.

    August 3, 2021

    Unforgiven and unforgotten: Beirut’s port blast one year on
  • التحليل
  • Unforgiven and unforgotten: Beirut’s port blast one year on

    On August 4, 2020, images out of Beirut shocked the world. Hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrate exploded in the capital’s port, destroying most of the city and leaving behind 206 victims, thousands of injured, and hundreds of thousands of displaced. In this series, guest contributors join MEI’s resident and non-resident experts to reflect upon the political, legal, urban, and foreign policy implications of what may well be Lebanon’s crime of the century.

    August 3, 2021