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Weekly Briefing: MBS South Asia swing aims to shore up relations
  • Analysis
  • Weekly Briefing: MBS South Asia swing aims to shore up relations

    In this week’s briefing, MEI experts Gerald Feierstein, Charles Lister, Marvin G. Weinbaum, and W. Robert Pearson provide analysis on Saudi-Pakistan relations, Turkish politics in the lead-up to March municipal elections, and the question of what to do with ISIS prisoners after the group’s territorial collapse.

    Yemen: The 60-Year War
    A Yemeni tribesman from the Popular Resistance Committees, supporting forces loyal to Yemen's Saudi-backed President, manoeuvrers a gun mounted on a pick up truck during fighting against Shiite Huthi rebels and their allies on June 30, 2017 in the area of Sirwah, west of Marib city.
  • Analysis
  • Yemen: The 60-Year War

    The ongoing civil conflict in Yemen is a continuation of a cycle of violence, political upheaval, and institutional collapse, caused by the failure of Yemeni society to address and resolve the popular anger and frustration arising from political marginalization, economic disenfranchisement, and the effects of an extractive, corrupt, rentier state.

    February 19, 2019

    Climate Change, Sea Level Rise, and Sustainable Urban Adaptation in Arab Coastal Cities
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Climate Change, Sea Level Rise, and Sustainable Urban Adaptation in Arab Coastal Cities

    This article highlights how the lesser-known issue of sea level rise makes Arab states increasingly vulnerable to climate change. Using the city of Doha as a case study to highlight how sea level rise represents a critical threat to many Arab coastal cities and a national security challenge to Gulf Arab nations, this article underscores the need for greater anticipation in the region’s urban planning of the risks posed by climate change and sea level rise.

    February 12, 2019

    Iran and the Gulf states 40 years after the 1979 revolution
    Ceremony marking the 39th anniversary of the Islamic revolution, at Azadi Square in Tehran, Iran
  • Analysis
  • Iran and the Gulf states 40 years after the 1979 revolution

    Geopolitically, the Iranian Revolution did more to transform the Middle East than any other event in the second half of the 20th century. It aimed to restructure not only Iran’s society and political system, but also others across the Islamic world. Refusing to align with either the United States or the Soviet Union in the Cold War, the newly established Islamic Republic sought to create a new geopolitical order in the Persian Gulf and greater Middle East based on a mantra of “neither East nor West.”

    February 8, 2019

    Why Assad’s alliance with Iran and Hezbollah will endure
  • Analysis
  • Why Assad’s alliance with Iran and Hezbollah will endure

    This article was published by IranSource on February 6, 2019.

    The Tehran-Damascus-Hezbollah trilateral partnership has been decades in the making. It pre-dates the Syrian civil war, has strengthened as a result of the war and will likely endure in the post-war years.

    February 8, 2019

    Renouncing al-Qaeda and the prospects for engagement
    Syrian fighters stand at the back of a pick-up as they attend a mock battle in anticipation of an attack by the regime on Idlib province and the surrounding countryside, during a graduation of new Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) members at a camp in the countryside of the northern Idlib province.
  • Analysis
  • Renouncing al-Qaeda and the prospects for engagement

    Hayat Tahrir al-Sham’s (HTS) recent seizure of the northern Syrian province of Idlib once again brings to the fore the debate over HTS’ renunciation of al-Qaeda (AQ). But can a group renounce AQ? If so, how should Western countries react, if at all?

    February 6, 2019

    The US withdrawal from Syria
  • Podcast
  • The US withdrawal from Syria

    MEI’s Robert Ford and Charles Lister join host Alistair Taylor to discuss the announced US withdrawal from Syria, the rush to fill the power vacuum that has ensued in its wake, and what the policy means for Syrians and the fight against ISIS.

    February 5, 2019

    Growing ties with Russia could strain Saudi-US relations
    Mohammad bin Salman and Vladimir Putin at the G20
  • Analysis
  • Growing ties with Russia could strain Saudi-US relations

    With more of their geopolitical goals aligning, ties between Riyadh and Moscow are growing closer, and the kingdom plans to invest billions of additional dollars in Russian petroleum and other projects.

    February 5, 2019

    The Global and Regional Geopolitics of Civil War in the Middle East
    An opposition fighter fires a gun from a village near al-Tamanah during ongoing battles with government forces in Syria's Idlib province on January 11, 2018
  • Analysis
  • The Global and Regional Geopolitics of Civil War in the Middle East

    Power dynamics between the major global and regional powers have indirectly influenced the civil wars currently plaguing the Middle East. The distribution of power caused by end of the Cold War facilitated the creation of two opposing camps that later competed for regional primacy in the civil wars of Iraq, Syria, and Yemen.

    Child soldiers and the YPG
    YPG in Tal Abyad
  • Analysis
  • Child soldiers and the YPG

    There is no doubt that minors are fighting in the ranks of the YPG, a Syrian Kurdish militia that controls most of the country’s northeast, but just how widespread is this phenomenon?

    February 4, 2019

    Will the Syrian Kurds strike a deal with Moscow?
    Two top political leaders of the Syrian Kurdish alliance and co-chairs of the Syrian Democratic Council Riad Darar (R) and Ilham Ahmed (L) speak together while delivering a speech during a press-conference, in Paris, on December 21, 2018.
  • Analysis
  • Will the Syrian Kurds strike a deal with Moscow?

    President Donald Trump’s announcement that he would withdraw U.S. troops from Syria came as a surprise to all parties involved, sparking particular concern among America’s Syrian Kurdish allies. This sudden and unexpected decision has been widely criticized not only by allies but also those inside the White House, with many analysts arguing that the U.S. withdrawal will expose the Syrian Kurds to an attack by Turkey. This move may push the YPG to seek the protection of Moscow following the US’s withdrawal in order to secure stability and dialogue with the government in Damascus.

    February 1, 2019

    Monday Briefing: US-Taliban talks progress, but major obstacles remain
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing: US-Taliban talks progress, but major obstacles remain

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Ahmad Majidyar, Marvin G. Weinbaum, Randa Slim, Paul Salem, and Guney Yildiz provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including U.S. negotiations with the Taliban in Afghanistan, a warning sent to Israel by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, the Sudanese president’s appeal for external support, Turkish-Syrian diplomacy, and Pakistan’s acceptance of Gulf aid.

    Iraq’s new government and Kurdish politics
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Iraq’s new government and Kurdish politics

    Zmkin Ali and Mac Skelton of the Institute of Regional and International Studies (IRIS) at the American University of Iraq Sulaimani, join host Alistair Taylor for a discussion on Iraq’s political climate, Baghdad’s relations with Erbil in the aftermath of the 2017 referendum, and other regional dynamics.

    January 24, 2019

    Feud between Turks and Kurds only adds to Syrian quagmire
  • Analysis
  • Feud between Turks and Kurds only adds to Syrian quagmire

    This article was published by The Hill on January 23, 2019.

    Once again, Turks and Kurds are squaring off to fight. Turks and Kurds have clashed with one another for nearly 1,000 years. The Kurds were in the Middle East first, with roots stretching back millennia. The Turks arrived in historical times and absorbed most Kurds into the Ottoman Empire. 

    The Politics of Combating Infectious Diseases in Southeast Asia and the Middle East
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Politics of Combating Infectious Diseases in Southeast Asia and the Middle East

    This article compares the local responses to the 2012-2018 outbreak of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) to that of the Avian Influenza outbreak in Southeast Asia from 2003-2015. How well do countries cope with the spread of new and deadly diseases? Why are some countries better at addressing the problem than others? And, what does this tell us about larger questions concerning states’ abilities to provide public goods (in this case health security) to their citizens and about global systems to prevent pandemics? What this comparison demonstrates is that countries with the ‘strongest’ state capacity to make and implement policy are best able to confront disease outbreaks.

    January 22, 2019