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Who Makes Tehran's Arab Policy?
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Who Makes Tehran's Arab Policy?

    Geography alone should make the Arab world Iran’s key foreign policy focus. Of Iran’s 13 immediate neighbors, seven are Arab countries.[1] But Tehran’s approach to the Arab world, with its 22 states extending from North Africa to the Arabian Peninsula, varies widely in intensity, and Iran’s objectives are equally varied depending on the country in question.

    Five Arab Elections in Search of a Democratic Transition
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Five Arab Elections in Search of a Democratic Transition


    Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika casts his ballot on April 17.

    In the current two months between mid-April and early June, five Arab countries—Algeria, Lebanon, Iraq, Egypt, and even war-torn Syria—are holding key elections, with little sign that any is moving in the direction of meaningful democratic transition.

    May 9, 2014

    U.S. Policy and the Iraq Elections
  • Analysis
  • U.S. Policy and the Iraq Elections

    With Iraq’s elections scheduled for April 30, the United States should be acutely aware of its reduced but remaining influence in the country. Even in 2006 and 2010, when more than 100,000 U.S. soldiers were present in Iraq, it was largely Iran that had the final say on the premierships, if not the exact shape of the cabinets that were formed after the elections.

    April 28, 2014

    Iraq’s Make Up or Break Up Elections
  • Analysis
  • Iraq’s Make Up or Break Up Elections

    Two years after the U.S. withdrawal and four years into Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s second term, Iraq is on the brink of breaking apart. The upcoming parliamentary elections scheduled for April 30, and the political process of government formation that will follow, present an opportunity to push for a return to more inclusive politics in Iraq. Unless Maliki is replaced or drastically changes his policies, these might be the last elections in a nominally united Iraq.

    April 25, 2014

    Erbil Meeting Report
  • Analysis
  • Erbil Meeting Report

    The Middle East Dialogue is a regional Track II forum that meets twice a year and brings together current and former officials and senior experts from the Middle East, the United States, Russia, China, and the EU to discuss emerging political & security trends in the region.  What follows is a report from the latest meeting of the Dialogue in Erbil, Iraq, on March 30-31, 2014, led by MEI’s Director of Track II Dialogues Randa Slim and VP for Policy and Research Paul Salem.

    April 21, 2014

    Saudi Intel Chief Prince Bandar Is Out, But Is He Really Out?
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Intel Chief Prince Bandar Is Out, But Is He Really Out?

    Read the full article at LobeLog.

    It might be a mistake to jump to conclusions about the removal of Prince Bandar bin Sultan from his post as chief of Saudi Arabian intelligence. When it comes to senior jobs held by the royals, the Kingdom’s decision-making process is entirely opaque and there is no way to know at this point whether the flamboyant former ambassador to the United States was pushed out or bailed out.

    April 16, 2014

    Comments by KRG President Massoud Barzani at Middle East Dialogue in Erbil
  • Analysis
  • Comments by KRG President Massoud Barzani at Middle East Dialogue in Erbil

    The Middle East Dialogue is a Track II forum focusing on emerging political and security trends in the region that meets twice a year, bringing together current and former officials and senior experts from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon, Kuwait, the United States, Russia, China, and the EU. Members of the delegation, led by The Middle East Institute’s president, Wendy Chamberlin, met March 31 with Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) President Massoud Barzani in Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan.

    April 9, 2014

    Erbil, Baghdad, and Implications of the Oil Dispute
  • Analysis
  • Erbil, Baghdad, and Implications of the Oil Dispute

    Erbil—the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan—was once a chaotic and dusty backwater. Today, it is well on its way to becoming an attractive and orderly commercial and government center. A decade ago there were virtually no trees, as they had all been cut down for firewood to heat Kurdish hearths during the 1990s wars among Kurds and between Kurds and Saddam Hussein’s army. A magnificent wooded park now graces the mile or so from the high-rise hotel district to the Kurdistan Regional Government’s parliament and offices.

    April 8, 2014

    Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Bin Laden's Ghost
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Bin Laden's Ghost

    Osama bin Laden may be dead, but his ghost was in Riyadh the other day, hovering over Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah as he issued a decree making it a crime for any Saudi citizen to take part in a war outside the kingdom.

    The obvious motivator was the civil war in Syria, where hundreds of young Saudis have been spotted in the ranks of the most radical jihadi groups battling both the government and other less extreme rebels. But the roots of the king’s action, and the problem it was designed to address, can be traced to the 1980s war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

    February 14, 2014

    De-Ba`thification in Iraq: How Not to Pursue Transitional Justice
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • De-Ba`thification in Iraq: How Not to Pursue Transitional Justice

    The de-Ba`thification process in Iraq has fallen profoundly short as a transitional justice mechanism over the past decade. Poorly conceived, badly implemented, and controlled by hard-liners, the process has been so highly politicized that it has eroded the rule of law and intensified the sectarian tensions that are at the heart of the violence haunting Iraq.

    January 30, 2014

    Qanats and Water Cooperation for a Sustainable Future
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Qanats and Water Cooperation for a Sustainable Future

    This essay is part of the Middle East-Asia Project (MAP) series on “Harvesting Water and Harnessing Cooperation: Qanat Systems in the Middle East and Asia.” 

    January 19, 2014

    Iraq: Reversing the Reversal
  • Analysis
  • Iraq: Reversing the Reversal

    Since the departure of U.S. ground forces from Iraq in 2011 in the wake of failed negotiations to extend the 2008 Status of Forces Agreement, the security situation in Iraq has steadily declined. To many, the situation was predictable, as the absence of a residual U.S. force to mature the Iraqi security forces and moderate long-standing political tensions among the sects led to a security vacuum filled by extremists and terrorists. To others, 10 years of investment and over 4,000 troops lost was enough, and it was time for the Iraqis to resolve their own internal conflicts.

    January 10, 2014

    Iraq’s Tangled Foreign Interests and Relations
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Iraq’s Tangled Foreign Interests and Relations

    The following is an excerpt from “Iraq’s Tangled Foreign Interests and Relations,” written by MEI Vice President Paul Salem and published by the Carnegie Middle East Center on December 24, 2013.  Click here to view the full report.

    January 6, 2014