This text has been translated by AI and may contain errors.
Skip to Content

Research & Commentary Results

Filter by
1060 Results
No Winners in Yemen
  • Analysis
  • No Winners in Yemen

    Hadi flip-flopped again. On Thursday, September 10, Yemeni President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi announced that the government would meet with the Houthi rebels directly and without any conditions at the UN-sponsored negotiating table. As the military buildup for the assault on Sana reaches its final stages, Hadi’s announcement came with a sense of relief that Sana, having endured six months of bombardment from the Saudi Air Force, would be spared a ground assault. But two days later, Hadi reversed and

    September 28, 2015

    The Humanitarian Crisis in the Middle East: Highlights from the MEI Conference
  • Analysis
  • The Humanitarian Crisis in the Middle East: Highlights from the MEI Conference

    For decades, most refugee crises followed a pattern: A war erupted, usually in a poor country, and beleaguered civilians staggered across the nearest border. The United Nations organized a response, rich nations footed the bill, and aid groups sent in workers to tend to the needy. Even in extreme cases, such as the mass exodus from Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion in the 1980s, the crisis was largely confined to the country at war and a few immediate neighbors.

    July 9, 2015

    Saudi Arabia's Quagmire
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia's Quagmire

    Read the full article on LobeLog.

    Three months after Saudi Arabia rounded up a few allies and began an intensive bombing campaign against the rebels known as Houthis across the border in Yemen, a conventional wisdom has developed. “It has not worked,” as The New York Times put it in a front-page article, and it probably can’t work because the strategic goals are too murky, the factions are too entrenched, the rivalries are too intense, and the conflict is too complicated to be resolved by a simplistic solution.

    July 1, 2015

    Oman’s Balancing Act in the Yemen Conflict
  • Analysis
  • Oman’s Balancing Act in the Yemen Conflict

    Oman’s government has declined to participate in the current Saudi-led military effort in Yemen. Instead, the country’s ruler, Sultan Qaboos, has called for “non-interference.” This position is an argument for internal political compromise that will eliminate the perceived need for Arab military intervention. To that end, Oman is offering a venue for talks with the hope of moving the political discussion forward.

    June 17, 2015

    Negotiating Yemeni Peace: Deep Divisions and Hard Realities
  • Analysis
  • Negotiating Yemeni Peace: Deep Divisions and Hard Realities

    After initially rejecting the UN call for talks, the Saudi-backed Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi faction reversed its position and agreed to meetings in Geneva on June 14.

    June 10, 2015

    China’s Iran Bet
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • China’s Iran Bet

    Iran offers a unique platform for China’s ambitions in the Middle East, and as such Beijing is willing to bet that the benefits of closer ties with Tehran will outnumber the costs. This analysis examines the calculations China is making regarding its relationship with Iran and argues that deepening bilateral ties reveal the centrality of Iran for China’s Middle East strategy.

    June 8, 2015

    The United States, the GCC, and Iran: The Crisis that Wasn’t
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The United States, the GCC, and Iran: The Crisis that Wasn’t

    Whatever eventually comes of the security agreements and mutual pledges of support made at last week’s summit conference between President Obama and leaders of the Arab Gulf monarchies, one result is clear: Saudi Arabia and the others may not be enthusiastic about the pending nuclear agreement with Iran, but they will not actively oppose it.

    May 19, 2015

    Stability in Yemen: A Matter of Gulf Collaboration
  • Analysis
  • Stability in Yemen: A Matter of Gulf Collaboration

    Yemen, like many other states in the region, has never conformed to the norms of an integral nation state; it has been in a state of crisis since at least the 1990s due to constant competition between the ruling state authority and various clans, tribal groups, transnational movements, and secessionists. In addition to these layers of conflict, regional players have tried to exploit domestic instability to further their own interests.

    May 8, 2015

    Saudi Arabia’s Return to Traditional Yemen Policy
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia’s Return to Traditional Yemen Policy

    Saudi Arabia’s intervention in Yemen is not surprising given Riyadh’s past policies and current perspectives on Gulf security. Yemen has always suffered from varying degrees of chaos and civil strife. Even in the best of times, large areas of the country lacked government control, and few if any in the region saw it as a functioning nation state. Whatever Gulf Arab leaders may have said publicly, most have viewed Yemen as a loose collection of autonomous or even independent regions, held together only by the lines drawn on a map.

    May 4, 2015

    Will Saudi Arabia and Iran Take Fight Into the Open?
  • Analysis
  • Will Saudi Arabia and Iran Take Fight Into the Open?

    Read the full article on CNN.

    Relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia have always been thorny, but rarely has the state of affairs been as venomous as it is today.

    Tehran and Riyadh each point to the other as the main reason for much of the turmoil in the Middle East. In its most recent incarnation, the Iranian-Saudi conflict by proxy has reached Yemen in a spiral that both sides portray as climatic.

    The Middle East in China’s Silk Road Visions: Business as Usual?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Middle East in China’s Silk Road Visions: Business as Usual?

    Chinese President Xi Jinping’s 2013 proclamation of the Silk Road Economic Belt (“One Belt, One Road”) and Twenty-First Century Maritime Silk Road initiatives provided an overarching framework for understanding China’s strategic priorities over the coming decade. The land-based and sea-based Silk Roads will link Asia and Europe via the Middle East and Central Asia through a series of transcontinental railroads, pipelines, ports, airports, and other infrastructure projects.

    April 14, 2015

    Misadventures in Violence in Yemen: Operation Resolute Storm
  • Analysis
  • Misadventures in Violence in Yemen: Operation Resolute Storm

    Saudi Arabia’s military intervention in Yemen is a risky move motivated by various Saudi objectives in Yemen and in the region. The immediate objective is to save President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi from Ansar Allah’s advance on Aden and reinstall him as head of state by forcing Ansar Allah to make major political concessions. But the operation also marks the increasing willingness of the Saudis to use their own military rather than rely on the United States.

    April 2, 2015

    Saudi Arabia’s High-Stakes Gamble
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia’s High-Stakes Gamble

    With its bold and public intervention in Yemen’s civil war, Saudi Arabia has cast off a half-century of caution and restraint in regional security affairs.

    March 27, 2015

    The Regional Response to the Crisis in Yemen
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Regional Response to the Crisis in Yemen

    March 26, 2015 – Paul Salem discusses the new challenge the unfolding crisis in Yemen poses to the region, and how the Arab League and the United States are responding as the fight against ISIS continues.

    March 26, 2015

    The GCC States and the Viability of a Strategic Military Partnership with China
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The GCC States and the Viability of a Strategic Military Partnership with China

    The term “strategic partnership” has been increasingly used in GCC circles to signify that relations with China are important and worthy of long-term investment. In a March 14, 2014 speech during his visit to Beijing, Saudi Arabia’s then Crown Prince Salman announced that “we are witnessing the transformation of the relationship with China to one of strategic partnership with broad dimensions, to the benefit of both our countries.” Saudi Arabia’s position was echoed by the emir of Qatar during a 2014 visit to China in which issues of common concern to all GCC states, especially combating terrorism, were discussed. Abdel-Aziz Aluwaisheg, GCC general assistant secretary for negotiations and strategic dialogue, has also noted that there is growing interest in the Gulf to develop a “strategic dialogue” with China.

    March 17, 2015