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Iraqi Forces Turn Attention to Hawija | Monday Briefing
  • Analysis
  • Iraqi Forces Turn Attention to Hawija | Monday Briefing

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Paul Salem, Robert S. Ford, Alex Vatanka, and Bilal Y. Saab provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the Iraqi military’s new operation to take back the town of Hawija from ISIS, the operation by the Syrian regime and U.S.-backed forces in Deir Ezzor, the Pakistani foreign minister’s visit to Iran, and the resumption of U.S. and Egyptian war games after being suspended since the 2011.

    A Return to Ambiguity in U.S.-Egyptian Relations | Monday Briefing
  • Analysis
  • A Return to Ambiguity in U.S.-Egyptian Relations | Monday Briefing

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Paul Salem, Gerald Feierstein, Randa Slim, Bilal Y. Saab, and Jean-François Seznec provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including tensions between Washington and Cairo over Egypt’s excessive authoritarian crackdown, Russia’s attempt to help mediate the G.C.C. crisis, the likely postponement of the Kurdish independence referendum, the performance of the Lebanese Army in anti-ISIS operations, and the Iraqi oil minister’s trip to Moscow to discuss oil production cuts.

    August 28, 2017

    Egypt’s New Museum Hopes to Lure Tourists Back
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s New Museum Hopes to Lure Tourists Back

    Egypt’s modern leaders may lack the means of their forebears when it comes to raising awe-inspiring monuments, but they still find impressive ways to promote the image of a confident nation. Widely touted “mega-projects,” like the Biblioteca Alexandrina, the “new” Suez Canal, and “New Cairo,” a skyscraper-studded capital city slated to replace the embattled 1400-year-old one, all come adorned with hyperbolic attributes and historic implications for all mankind.

    August 17, 2017

    Arab Queer Cinema Emerges to Break Taboos
  • Analysis
  • Arab Queer Cinema Emerges to Break Taboos

    One of the most revealing moments of the recently concluded Ramadan TV season occurred in the new Egyptian series, Don’t Turn Off the Sun. A newly-wedded young wife finds out that her husband is having an affair with his male friend; a liaison that ultimately leads to the dissolution of their marriage. The most telling aspect of what was potentially perceived as a provocative move from the series’ makers was the fact that it didn’t stir any controversy at all.

    August 10, 2017

    Red Sea Islands Deal Undermines Arab Peace Initiative
  • Analysis
  • Red Sea Islands Deal Undermines Arab Peace Initiative

    The Saudi-led Arab Peace Initiative is losing its value in the wake of Egypt’s decision to return the Red Sea islands of Tiran and Sanafir to Saudi Arabia, and the latter’s participation as a security guarantor of the Egypt-Israel peace treaty.

    Last month, the Egyptian parliament, bucking widespread public and institutional opposition, acknowledged Saudi sovereignty over the islands.

    Most attention has focused on the dispute over sovereignty, which has been under Egyptian administration for more than half a century. But the real significance of the deal lies elsewhere.

    July 25, 2017

    Egyptian Copts Under Attack: The Frailty of a National Unity Discourse
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Egyptian Copts Under Attack: The Frailty of a National Unity Discourse

    This essay discusses the recent spate of attacks upon and heightened sense of insecurity felt by Egyptian Coptic Christians. The essay focuses on Copts’ growing frustration with state authorities’ responses to their grievances.

    July 13, 2017

    Hamas-Dahlan Détente Keeps Jordan on Edge
  • Analysis
  • Hamas-Dahlan Détente Keeps Jordan on Edge

    Jordan’s conspicuous silence over the unexpected trilateral rapprochement involving Hamas, Egypt, and former Fatah strongman Mohammad Dahlan does not mean that Amman is not keeping a close eye on recent developments. It is an unusual partnership that brings together once bitter foes, especially in the case of Dahlan and Hamas.

    July 11, 2017

    Adam Henein: Egypt’s Sculptor Icon
  • Analysis
  • Adam Henein: Egypt’s Sculptor Icon

    The road to Haraniyya, a formerly rural area just beyond the Giza pyramids, is now an eight-lane highway flanked by red-brick buildings packed and stacked as if designed by some demented cubist. But take the exit, cross a canal and tucked behind a wall of residential towers, the Museum of Adam Henein exists in magical contrast, a verdant stronghold of living art, and one of Cairo’s hidden treasures.

    June 29, 2017

    The Influence of North African Militaries in Foreign Policy-Making
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Influence of North African Militaries in Foreign Policy-Making

    This essay looks at five North African states, arguing that the armed forces — for a variety of often case-specific reasons — are actually not as politically powerful and thus influential in foreign policy-making as one might expect. It first discusses the political strength of the military establishments of five North African states — Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt — and then investigates the difference, if any, that the recent Arab upheavals have made in their involvement in foreign policy-making.

    June 28, 2017

    Monday Briefing: ISIS losing territory, President Erdogan visits Sudan
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing: ISIS losing territory, President Erdogan visits Sudan

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Charles Lister, W. Robert Pearson, and Yousef Munayyer provide analysis on ISIS’ continued threat to security despite losing territory, President Erdogan’s upcoming visit to Sudan as a political calculation, and Mohammed Dahlan’s effort to return to Palestinian politics.

    Egypt’s Emerging Alternative Film Scene
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Emerging Alternative Film Scene

    The cinema has long been a contested space in Egypt. Following its nationalization in 1966, a formerly flourishing film industry ran steadily downhill and movie theater operators were subjected to censors’ increasingly puerile whims. The only independent company allowed to operate was Misr International Films—founded in 1972 by Egyptian director Youssef Chahine (1926-2008)—to produce, distribute, and exhibit films while coincidentally enabling the state to posit itself as an indulgent patron of cinematic art. The annual state-run Cairo International Film Festival (CIFF, est.

    May 19, 2017

    Al-Qaeda’s Turning Against its Syrian Affiliate
  • Analysis
  • Al-Qaeda’s Turning Against its Syrian Affiliate

    “There are really big problems right now,” a conservative Islamist cleric close to Syria’s armed opposition told me – “al-Qaeda is trying to create a new loyal faction in Idlib, but that’s being prevented by al-Hayat.” As this influential cleric and four other similarly well-connected Islamist opposition figures have described to me in recent days, al-Qaeda’s central leadership is growing increasingly exasperated at its former Syrian affiliate – now named Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (H.T.S.), after a second rebrand in January 2017 – and is now actively seeking to build a rival movement more loyal

    Pope’s Egypt Visit to Reassure MidEast Christians | Monday Briefing
  • Analysis
  • Pope’s Egypt Visit to Reassure MidEast Christians | Monday Briefing

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Paul Salem, Alex Vatanka, Eran Etzion, and Gerald Feierstein provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the Pope’s upcoming visit to Egypt, Ahmadinejad’s public feud with Ayatollah Khamenei, Israeli efforts to draw Russian support away from Iran, and the appointment of Prince Khalid bin Salman as Saudi Ambassador to the U.S.

    U.S., Egypt Back in Business | Monday Briefing
  • Analysis
  • U.S., Egypt Back in Business | Monday Briefing

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Paul Salem, Yousef Munayyer, and Randa Slim provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the meeting between Egyptian President Sisi and President Trump, the upcoming meeting between President Trump and Jordan’s King Abdullah, and the Trump administration’s adoption of Obama-era policies in Syria.

    April 3, 2017

    America and Egypt Need Each Other
  • Analysis
  • America and Egypt Need Each Other

    Read the full article on The National Interest.

    Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi’s visit to President Trump signals the restoration of the close U.S.-Egyptian relations that have been a key pillar of U.S. policy toward the Middle East for four and half decades. The United States has an abiding interest in a stable, prosperous and well-governed Egypt, and Egyptians have an interest in close relations with the United States’ government, economy and society.

    April 3, 2017