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How the UAE-Israel deal could change the regional power balance
TEHRAN, IRAN - MAY 06: (----EDITORIAL USE ONLY â MANDATORY CREDIT -
  • Analysis
  • How the UAE-Israel deal could change the regional power balance

    While most experts believe that the recent normalization of ties between Israel and the UAE will not lead to a significant change in the regional balance of power, there are indications that it has the potential to bring about such a change in the long run.

    November 2, 2020

    Monday Briefing: Bracing for Tuesday and the interregnum
  • Commentary
  • Monday Briefing: Bracing for Tuesday and the interregnum

    This week’s briefing on recent news and upcoming events in the region featuring Paul Salem, Michael Sexton, Alex Vatanka, and Gerald Feierstein.

    November 2, 2020

    Ayatollah Khamenei’s gamble and a green light for negotiations
    Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei makes statements regarding coronavirus (COVID-19) on March 22, 2020 in Tehran, Iran.
  • Analysis
  • Ayatollah Khamenei’s gamble and a green light for negotiations

    As the U.S. prepares to head to the polls to choose its next president, Iran finds itself at a dead end. Hit hard by American sanctions and its own mismanagement of the economy, Tehran needs to negotiate with Washington to get out of its current economic crisis and shore up its waning popular legitimacy. With an eye to addressing these issues and mindful of the steady erosion of support for the government, President Hassan Rouhani has obtained permission from Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to negotiate with the U.S. While the news has not yet been made public, Rouhani has told Ayatollah Khamenei that he will begin talks to reach an agreement with the winner of the upcoming election — regardless of who it is — and the Iranian leader has given his initial consent.

    November 2, 2020

    Iran and US policy after the election
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Iran and US policy after the election

    Nazila Fathi, Nazee Moinian, and Alex Vatanka join host Alistair Taylor to discuss Iran, U.S. policy, and the potential impact of the upcoming presidential election.

    October 29, 2020

    Women in Iran: Political representation without rights
    Photo by Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Women in Iran: Political representation without rights

    The Islamic Republic of Iran recently announced that it is now welcoming the possibility of women’s leadership at the highest levels of government. Optimists are celebrating this development in the belief that it could reinvigorate weak voter turnout and lead to much-needed reforms in the country. But a more realistic analysis finds that this is little more than a cynical ploy. There is an overwhelming body of evidence that suggests not much has happened to truly advance women’s rights in the Islamic Republic in years.

    October 29, 2020

    Oman plays it safe on Israel
  • Analysis
  • Oman plays it safe on Israel

    Since Aug. 13, speculation has been rife that the Sultanate of Oman will soon follow the United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) lead and formalize full-fledged ties with Israel. Yet, at least thus far, Muscat has refused to join the UAE, Bahrain, and now Sudan in normalizing relations with Tel Aviv. As a moderate Arab country, where tolerance is firmly embedded into the national ethos and the Ibadi sect of Islam, Oman appears to be maintaining a balanced position on the overall Arab trend toward normalizing relations with Israel. Muscat’s positive reaction to the Abraham Accords is not a major change in strategy and is more illustrative of Oman’s longstanding position on normalization.

    October 27, 2020

    Using the Convention against Torture to hold Syria to account
    A general view of the Peace Palace is seen as Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi leads its delegation to the International Court of Justice to defend the national interests of Myanmar during Gambia's genocide case against Myanmar on December 11, 2019 in The Hague, Netherlands.
  • Analysis
  • Using the Convention against Torture to hold Syria to account

    Last month, the Netherlands announced its intent to hold Syria responsible for gross human rights violations and torture under the U.N. Convention against Torture (CAT). With only one other case — Belgium v. Senegal — brought to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) under the CAT, the Netherlands is entering relatively uncharted waters. Indeed, it would be the first country to litigate the substance of Article 1 of the Convention. While it is unlikely that the Netherlands’ claims will reach the ICJ for another year or more, its announcement serves as an important step in the push for broader accountability in Syria.

    October 22, 2020

    Will Trump’s Syria hostage diplomacy work?
    Photo by JOSEPH EID/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Will Trump’s Syria hostage diplomacy work?

    With a presidential election looming in the United States, the continuing crisis in Syria is unlikely to make headlines. Aside from the COVID-19 pandemic, raging wildfires, and the occasional flare-up of violence in Idlib, Syria has been largely off the radar in the U.S. for quite some time. Yet dramatic new revelations suggest that Syria could be on the administration’s agenda more prominently as President Donald Trump makes a serious, if desperate, move to secure American hostages thought by U.S. officials to be held in Damascus.

    US sanctions hurt Syrian civilians — they need to be worth it
    Photo by Hasan Belal/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • US sanctions hurt Syrian civilians — they need to be worth it

    On June 17, 2020, the U.S. State Department’s special envoy to Syria, Joel Rayburn, announced the beginning of the “summer of Caesar,” promising a wave of sanctions designations under the newly activated Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act. Summer has come and gone, but there’s little to show for it.

    October 15, 2020

    Tehran’s worst nightmare
  • Commentary
  • Tehran’s worst nightmare

    The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict could spill over to Iran’s Azeri minority, setting off a battle the government can’t contain.

    Biden and misinterpreting Iran’s intent
    Photo by Iranian Supreme Leader Press Office/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Biden and misinterpreting Iran’s intent

    With the latest polls suggesting a likely victory for the Democrats in the November U.S. presidential elections, a looming foreign policy crisis awaits a potential Biden administration: escalating tensions with Iran. While the Democrats’ “diplomacy first” approach has won praise across the Atlantic as the solution to deescalating tensions with Tehran, this Western-centric view ignores the changing reality on the ground in Iran. If Biden thinks he can return to the 2015 status quo, he may be in for a surprise.

    Regional transit trade isn’t enough to drive Pakistan’s Gwadar Port
    In this photograph taken on October 4, 2017, Pakistani labourers walk through Gwadar port. Remote and impoverished, Pakistan's Gwadar port at first glance seems an unlikely crown jewel in a multi-billion dollar development project with China aimed at constructing a 21st century Silk Road. Situated on a barren peninsula in the Arabian Sea, Gwadar, or the
  • Analysis
  • Regional transit trade isn’t enough to drive Pakistan’s Gwadar Port

    Landlocked Afghanistan has begun using the Chinese-operated Pakistani port of Gwadar for transit trade — a development Pakistani officials see as marking the start of Gwadar’s role as a gateway port through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. Pakistan’s hope to develop the Arabian Sea port into a gateway for Afghanistan, Central Asia, and China’s Xinjiang region has been a long-standing one — and it is misguided. Islamabad should instead focus on local drivers to build the port and use it as a vehicle to develop the impoverished, but resource-rich region of southern Balochistan.

    October 14, 2020

    Jordan: US security assistance and border defense capacity building
  • Analysis
  • Jordan: US security assistance and border defense capacity building

    The Department of Defense (DoD) border security assistance programs in the Middle East region have helped partner countries to defend their borders against terrorist militia groups and other transnational security threats in the region. These programs set the standard for how the US military can foster long-term stability in the Middle East, while gradually drawing down its presence in the region.

    October 6, 2020

    Farcical treaties
    Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Farcical treaties

    Are the treaties with the UAE and Bahrain in any way comparable to previous genuine milestones, like the agreements with Egypt and Jordan? Can we realistically see them as helping to lead the way to a brighter future, at least as far as Israel’s conflicts with its neighbors are concerned? The answer is almost certainly “not really.”

    October 6, 2020