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Research & Commentary Results

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Autonomy Can Resolve 40-Year Western Sahara Conflict
  • التحليل
  • Autonomy Can Resolve 40-Year Western Sahara Conflict

    2015 marks the anniversary of the Green March, the spectacular initiative 40 years ago that began the decolonization of the Spanish Sahara. Since then, although Moroccan administration of the territory was recognized by the United Nations and populations in the region have voted regularly in Moroccan elections (including this year), final status has not been given international recognition. It is necessary that this chapter of decolonization be officially closed.

    November 6, 2015

    In Turkey, a New ‘Deep State’ With Same Foes
  • التحليل
  • In Turkey, a New ‘Deep State’ With Same Foes

    Read the full commentary on The New York Times.

    Since the early days of the republic, Turkey’s deep state has been seen as the clandestine defender of the Turkish establishment and the secular and nationalist ideology established by Turkey’s founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

    Views from Cairo
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Views from Cairo

    The following represents findings from an MEI delegation trip to Egypt that took place between October 5 and 9.   The delegation met with government, civil society, youth and business leaders, and heard a variety of views on the country’s challenges. What follows is a presentation of the views we heard, not an MEI assessment.

    General Situation

    November 6, 2015

    AUTHOR SPOTLIGHT: Richard B. Parker
  • التحليل
  • AUTHOR SPOTLIGHT: Richard B. Parker

    Only a few authors have works that can be found on both floors of the Oman Library at The Middle East Institute, and fewer still that have a personal connection to both the institute and the history of the region. The late Ambassador Richard B. Parker can claim this status, having served 31 years in the Foreign Service and as the third editor of The Middle East Journal. He was also a longtime MEI scholar-in-residence.

    November 5, 2015

    Hezbollah and the Syrian Conflict
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Hezbollah and the Syrian Conflict

    This essay explores what Hezbollah seek to accomplish through its intervention in Syria, how it views the conflict in Syria, the outcome it desires, and the possible adverse impact of Hezbollah’s involvement in Syria upon its popularity and mobilization in Lebanon.

    November 4, 2015

    The AKP’s Surprising but Pyrrhic Victory
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  • The AKP’s Surprising but Pyrrhic Victory

    In a stunning electoral comeback that has surprised everyone, including its own legislators, Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) captured almost 50 percent of the votes, but well over 50 percent of parliamentary seats, in Sunday’s elections. There are many lingering questions. Considering that even the pro-government pollsters did not foresee such a victory, many have asked whether the elections were free and fair. If so, how did the AKP manage to reverse its electoral fortunes in just five months in a country that has been mired in chaos and violence during that time?

    Syria's Peace Talks Would Be Nowhere without the Iran Nuclear Deal
  • التحليل
  • Syria's Peace Talks Would Be Nowhere without the Iran Nuclear Deal

    Read the full article at The National Interest.

    Critics of the July 14 nuclear deal with Iran railed against it on the grounds that it would embolden what they argue is Tehran’s destabilizing behavior in the Middle East. The reasoning goes like this: lifting sanctions gives Iran access to tens of billions of dollars that will flow to fund disruptive activities and lets Iran freely pursue its regional ambitions without fear of reprisals.

    The Raised Stakes of Turkey’s Do-Over Election
  • التحليل
  • The Raised Stakes of Turkey’s Do-Over Election

    The Turkish electorate is going to the polls on Sunday for the second time in just over five months. After 13 years in power, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) failed to secure enough votes in June to form a majority government. In the hope another vote could deliver a parliamentary majority to his party, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called for snap elections. But polls indicate that Erdogan might not get what he wants.

    A Message to Vienna: Build a Framework, but Leave the Details to Syrians
  • التحليل
  • A Message to Vienna: Build a Framework, but Leave the Details to Syrians

    As Secretary of State John Kerry seeks to launch a new peace effort on Syria, he needs to be careful about the goals he sets and the language he uses. Getting the fundamentals wrong at the outset might scuttle the process or could ensure that whatever deal results will crumble under pressure.  It will then lead to more warfare and a worsening of the refugee crisis. Moreover, it would preclude us from securing our strategic goal of mobilizing more Syrians to contain and eventually expel terrorists from Syria.

    Dateline Egypt: Roadmaps, Refinancing, and Regional Roles
  • التحليل
  • Dateline Egypt: Roadmaps, Refinancing, and Regional Roles

    In the past ten days Egypt held a first round of parliamentary elections, announced renewed loan talks with the IMF, experienced new clashes with militants in the Sinai, and joined multinational talks to end the war in Syria. These headlines provide current glimpses into the country’s complex and challenging political, economic and security trajectories.

    October 29, 2015

    Toward a Political Theory of Sectarianism in the Middle East: The Salience of Authoritarianism over Theology
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Toward a Political Theory of Sectarianism in the Middle East: The Salience of Authoritarianism over Theology

    Sunni-Shi’i relations have not always been conflict-ridden nor was sectarianism a strong political force in modern Muslim politics until relatively recently. What factors contributed to this change? In this essay, the author argues that the national context is essential for understanding sectarian conflict in the Middle East today.

    October 27, 2015

    Yes, Mr. Obama, There Is a Syrian Opposition
  • التحليل
  • Yes, Mr. Obama, There Is a Syrian Opposition

    President Barack Obama has notoriously disparaged the moderate opposition as “farmers or dentists or maybe some radio reporters who didn’t have a lot of experience fighting.” The key question about the Syrian opposition is not whether it can fight — in fact many of its cadres are former Syrian army soldiers — but whether it can govern.

    October 23, 2015

    Arab Civil Society after the Arab Spring: Weaker but Deeper
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Arab Civil Society after the Arab Spring: Weaker but Deeper

    Formal organizations can be easily studied, but they alone will not bring about democratization: the conceptual history of civil society scholarship in the Middle East is testament to this. We must instead peer into hidden spaces of resistance not captured by the formal sector.

    October 22, 2015