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The decline of the US’s role in Syria
bombed urban area in Syria
  • Analysis
  • The decline of the US’s role in Syria

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Charles Lister, Alex Vatanka, Randa Slim, and Marvin G. Weinbaum provide analysis on the US’s silence amid the Assad regime’s expansion, the Iranian president’s trip to Europe, the uptick in violence after Iraq’s elections, and the upcoming Pakistani parliamentary elections.

    The decline of the US’s role in Syria
    Charles Lister, Senior Fellow

    Where is ISIS today?
  • Video
  • Where is ISIS today?

    After years of international intervention, ISIS was routed from its Iraqi stronghold in Mosul and from its so-called capital in the Syrian city of Raqqa last year. However, the group remains dangerous both in the region and globally. Charles Lister discusses how ISIS is operating today, and what the international community must do to combat it.

    June 26, 2018

    A “diplomatic dance” in southern Syria
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • A “diplomatic dance” in southern Syria

    Several countries have engaged in a flurry of diplomatic moves in recent days to prevent combat between Israeli and Iranian forces in southern Syria from escalating into full-scale war. MEI senior fellows Robert Ford and Charles Lister join host Paul Salem to discuss these moves and the state of the Syrian conflict.

    May 31, 2018

    What lies ahead for Afghanistan: the various scenarios
  • Video
  • What lies ahead for Afghanistan: the various scenarios

    The way forward in Afghanistan seems as unclear as it has ever been. An outright military victory against the Taliban and other insurgent groups appears to be unachievable. The prospect of insurgents overrunning the country soon appears similarly unlikely. At the same time, a negotiated peace seems presently improbable. At least on terms outlined by the Kabul government and international community, the Taliban shows little interest in reconciliation.

    May 22, 2018

    The risk of interstate war(s) in the Middle East
  • Video
  • The risk of interstate war(s) in the Middle East

    While armed nonstate actors and proxy militias have been grabbing most headlines in recent years, the risk of interstate war in the Middle East is rising at an alarming rate. This includes the risk of war between Israel and Iran, Saudi Arabia and Iran, and possibly the United States and Iran, or the United States and Russia. Tensions between Israel and Iran have boiled over several times in recent weeks in Syria, risking a serious escalation between the two countries.

    May 17, 2018

    Don’t scrap Washington’s Lebanon policy. It’s working.
  • Analysis
  • Don’t scrap Washington’s Lebanon policy. It’s working.

    Read the full article on Foreign Policy.

    In Sunday’s elections in Lebanon, Hezbollah and its allies gained more than half the seats in Parliament. After a result like that, an old canard in Washington is likely to resurface with full force: the idea that U.S. policy in Lebanon is a disaster. Don’t buy it. In fact, of all the investments the United States has made in the Middle East over the past decade, Lebanon has generated the greatest returns.

    May 8, 2018

    Trump’s new arms sales policy
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Trump’s new arms sales policy

    What impact will the Trump administration’s new arms sales policy, named “Buy American,” have on the Middle East, historically one of the major destinations for U.S.-made weapons? Michael O’Hanlon, senior fellow and director of research for the Foreign Policy program at Brookings, and Bilal Saab, director of MEI’s Defense and Security program, join host Paul Salem to discuss.

    May 3, 2018

    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

    The battles in, above and around Syria
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • The battles in, above and around Syria

    Amb. Robert Ford and Charles Lister join host Paul Salem to discuss last week’s U.S. airstrikes in Syria in response to the Assad government’s ongoing use of chemical weapons, what the Trump administration is signaling about America’s plans there, and the escalating standoff between Israeli and Iranian forces in the country.

    April 19, 2018

    Limit Iran's missiles? Sure, but first come up with a plan
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Limit Iran's missiles? Sure, but first come up with a plan

    Critics of the Iran nuclear deal have consistently argued that one of its major flaws is that it didn’t address Tehran’s ballistic missile program. Imposing limits on those weapons of terror, opponents of the deal say, is a primary U.S. objective and should have been part of our negotiating strategy with the Iranians from the beginning.

    March 29, 2018