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Egypt’s Need for Low-Income Housing
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Need for Low-Income Housing

    In March 2014, before resigning as Egypt’s minister of defense and pursuing his campaign for the presidency, General Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi announced an agreement with the UAE construction firm Arabtec to build a million affordable homes for “Egyptian youth.” The Egyptian Army facilitated the deal by pledging to donate 160 million square meters of land in 18 locations nationwide. Although Arabtec had never handled a project of this scale or value ($40 billion), one of its largest stakeholders (22 percent) is the Abu Dhabi state fund Aabar.

    January 15, 2015

    Israel’s Upcoming Elections: Straws in the Wind
  • Analysis
  • Israel’s Upcoming Elections: Straws in the Wind

    The electoral campaign in Israel is still unfolding, and with about two months to go anything might happen to upend predictions about the outcome. But there are straws in the wind.

    January 15, 2015

    The New Suez Canal Project and Egypt’s Economic Future
  • Analysis
  • The New Suez Canal Project and Egypt’s Economic Future

    During a televised speech on August 5, 2014, President Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi announced a “surprise” he’d planned for the Egyptian people: the launch of the New Suez Canal mega-project, involving an expansion of the existing canal and the development of its environs into a global trade hub. The project is making waves in Egypt and worldwide, mobilizing equipment, contracts, and finance. But the plan to widen and deepen the existing canal to permit passage to the world’s largest container ships and to dig a parallel waterway to allow for two-way traffic was not new.

    December 19, 2014

    Egypt and Israel: Sinai Heat Thaws the Cold Peace
  • Analysis
  • Egypt and Israel: Sinai Heat Thaws the Cold Peace

    Egyptian President Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi is no Zionist, as senior Israeli interlocutors like to point out, but his vision of state sovereignty and Egyptian national security often closely aligns with the interests of Israel. When Sinai’s Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, Egypt’s most lethal jihadi group, recently pledged allegiance to the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, perhaps the most interesting response was the non-response by the governments of Egypt and Israel. From the view of both, the origins and ideologies of Islamist groups are all the same.

    December 16, 2014

    Early Elections in Israel: A Reality Check
  • Analysis
  • Early Elections in Israel: A Reality Check

    There’s an expression in Israel along the lines of “people are scrupulously honest with pollsters, then they get into the voting booth and lie like hell.” It is important to bear this chestnut in mind as one scans survey returns regarding prospects for the major parties in the upcoming elections.

    December 5, 2014

    Egypt and the Obama Administration
  • Analysis
  • Egypt and the Obama Administration

    This paper is part of an MEI scholar series, titled “Obama’s Legacy in the Middle East: Passing the Baton in 2017.” Click here to view the full project, or navigate using the table of contents to the right.

    November 26, 2014

    Traffic Accidents in Egypt: The Need for Reform
  • Analysis
  • Traffic Accidents in Egypt: The Need for Reform

    Cairo’s Ring Road, a peripheral highway linking the city’s core to surrounding districts, is an eight-lane free-for-all, with cars, buses, and overloaded trucks weaving randomly at high speeds. “I for one consider it to be an off-road, not a highway,” says Mahmoud Mostafa Kamal, editor of the online Arabic-language automotive magazine, el-Tawkeel (The Dealership).

    November 24, 2014

    Democracy Promotion: Obama's Mixed Record
  • Analysis
  • Democracy Promotion: Obama's Mixed Record

    This paper is part of an MEI scholar series, titled “Obama’s Legacy in the Middle East: Passing the Baton in 2017.” Click here to view the full project, or navigate using the table of contents to the right.

    Current Situation

    November 19, 2014

    The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict and Obama’s Legacy
  • Analysis
  • The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict and Obama’s Legacy

    This paper is part of an MEI scholar series, titled “Obama’s Legacy in the Middle East: Passing the Baton in 2017.” Click here to view the full project, or navigate using the table of contents to the right.

    The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has gone through a number of different phases in its long history. It is possible—though only time will tell—that a new phase is beginning now, but not a particularly hopeful one.[1]

    November 14, 2014

    Soft Islam: Indonesia’s Interfaith Mission for Peace in the Middle East
  • Analysis
  • Soft Islam: Indonesia’s Interfaith Mission for Peace in the Middle East

    Historians and anthropologists have focused on Muslim networks of scholars, merchants, and pilgrims that connect the Middle East with Southeast Asia. Especially with respect to the study of Islam in Indonesia, where political scientists and anthropologists approach Islam largely in terms of national politics and local cultures, this burgeoning body of literature on global Muslim networks offers both ethnographic insights into actual practices and an historical appreciation for the longue durée. The importance of this scholarship notwithstanding, much of this work focuses on formal networks of migration, trade, learning, and pilgrimage. In this respect, the cultural and political work of Islam has been largely confined to the study of either Muslim scholars or lay Muslims who participate in trade, travel, study, and migration. Here I shift the focus to a religious diplomacy tour that connected Muslims with states, citizen-believers, and global politics.

    November 12, 2014

    Egypt’s War on Terror: ISIS, President Sisi, and the U.S.-led Coalition
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s War on Terror: ISIS, President Sisi, and the U.S.-led Coalition

    As the war against ISIS rages in Syria and Iraq, Egypt is fighting its own war on terror. On October 24, the Sinai Peninsula witnessed the deadliest attack on Egypt’s military in years. Twenty-eight soldiers were killed and another 30 injured when a car bomb exploded at the Karm al-Qawadis security checkpoint in Sheikh Zuweid in North Sinai.

    November 6, 2014

    Gaza’s Economic Revival to be Addressed at Cairo Conference
  • Analysis
  • Gaza’s Economic Revival to be Addressed at Cairo Conference

    This summer’s war between Israel and Hamas, like the previous rounds — Operation Cast Lead in 2008-2009 and Operation Pillar of Cloud in 2012 — exacted a terrible cost not only in human lives (more than 2,100 Palestinians and 73 Israelis[1]) but also in the wholesale destruction of Gaza’s infrastructure.  The Palestinian Authority estimates reconstruction and rehabilitation costs of the recent conflict to exceed $4 billion, more than two times Gaza’s GNP.[2]

    October 10, 2014

    Q&A with Hala Shukrallah, President of Egypt's Al-Dostour Party
  • Analysis
  • Q&A with Hala Shukrallah, President of Egypt's Al-Dostour Party

    Hala Shukrallah, president of Egypt’s Al Dostour (Constitution) Party, spoke with MEI about the party’s preparations for upcoming parliamentary elections, its legislative agenda, and the challenges it will face in Parliament. See more of her comments at this year’s Egypt Conference.

    Q: How has the Dostour party been preparing for the upcoming parliamentary elections?

    September 26, 2014