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Monday Briefing: Iran and Israel come to blows
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing: Iran and Israel come to blows

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Charles Lister, Gerald Feierstein, W. Robert Pearson, and Marvin G. Weinbaum provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the escalating deterrence between Israel and Iran, Pompeo’s pressure to resolve the Gulf crisis, Turkey’s increasing isolation, and the Pashtun protests in Pakistan.

    Trump’s new arms-sales policy is good but sounds awful
  • Analysis
  • Trump’s new arms-sales policy is good but sounds awful

    This article was first published on Defense One.

    The White House last week released a new plan—called “Buy American”—to shore up U.S. arms sales to global friends and allies. It’s borne out of President Donald Trump’s desire, which he articulated during his presidential campaign, to sell more American weapons as a means to boost the U.S. economy and create more jobs.

    April 27, 2018

    Vibrant art scene inspires cooperation, competition in Gulf
  • Analysis
  • Vibrant art scene inspires cooperation, competition in Gulf

    The countries of the Middle East are using art to remodel their national identities. Billions of dollars have been spent on colossal building efforts and massive acquisition programs in an effort to expand the cultural sector in the Middle East, especially in the Gulf. Art acquisition now appears to be part of a geopolitical strategy by Gulf countries to use their hydrocarbon money to purchase cultural clout and establish themselves as international cultural centers.

    April 3, 2018

    Mohammed bin Salman in Washington: Impact on U.S.-Saudi relations
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Mohammed bin Salman in Washington: Impact on U.S.-Saudi relations

    Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman passed through D.C. this week to sell his Vision 2030 roadmap for transforming the Saudi economy. Karen Young, senior resident scholar Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, and Gerald Feierstein join host Paul Salem to discuss this, as well as other key policy issues affecting U.S.-Saudi relations, from the war in Yemen to the Kingdom’s internal crackdown on corruption.

    March 22, 2018

    Saudi crown prince's upcoming US visit: what to expect
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Saudi crown prince's upcoming US visit: what to expect

    Read the full article on The Hill

    Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman will land in the U.S. on March 19 as part of a three week, multi-city tour. It’s his first extended foreign travel, which has already taken him to London, since being named Saudi heir apparent in June 2017.

    March 14, 2018

    Tillerson's departure and the future of US policy in the Middle East
  • Analysis
  • Tillerson's departure and the future of US policy in the Middle East

    Rex Tillerson’s unhappy tenure at State Department ends with a whimper – Gerald Feierstein        

    Rex Tillerson was never an easy fit for the Trump administration. His management of the State Department was a source of constant frustration for the career staff as well as Capitol Hill. On policy issues, Tillerson hewed more closely than Trump to establishment Republican positions. Allied with Secretary of Defense Mattis and National Security Advisor McMaster, Tillerson often acted as an anchor against the president’s more aggressive impulses.

    What happens when Yemen collapses?
  • Analysis
  • What happens when Yemen collapses?

    Read the full article on The National Interest

    Turmoil in Aden over the past few weeks has underlined the existential crisis confronting Yemen. The alliances that have been at the center of the three-year-old civil war—the Hadi government and its Saudi-led coalition of supporters versus the Houthi alliance with former President Ali Abdullah Saleh—have fractured.

    March 7, 2018

    Bahrain says arrested 116 members of IRGC-established “terror cell”
  • Analysis
  • Bahrain says arrested 116 members of IRGC-established “terror cell”

    The Bahraini government said on Saturday that its security forces had foiled a number of terrorist plots and arrested 116 people who were allegedly members of an armed group run by Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC). “The Revolutionary Guards formed several terrorist organizations and brought them together under one umbrella,” a statement released by the Bahraini Interior Ministry said.

    March 5, 2018

    Back channel diplomacy in the Middle East
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Back channel diplomacy in the Middle East

    With the absence of multilateral diplomatic forums in the Middle East and the Trump administration scaling back on U.S. diplomatic outreach, the role of backdoor diplomatic channels, known as “Track II” dialogues, has seldom been more important. Randa Slim, director of MEI’s program on conflict management and Track II dialogues, and Robert Ford, former US ambassador to Syria, join Paul Salem to discuss the role of these dialogues in addressing issues ranging from the Syrian civil war to the conflict in Yemen and regional tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia.

    February 8, 2018

    Bahrain says IRGC plotted pipeline bombing near Manama
  • Analysis
  • Bahrain says IRGC plotted pipeline bombing near Manama

    On Wednesday, the Bahraini Foreign Ministry announced that the country’s security forces have arrested four members of a “terrorist cell” involved in a bomb attack on an oil pipeline and claimed that the suspects had received training in Iran by the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC).

    February 8, 2018