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Monday Briefing: Bahrain workshop is little more than a kabuki show
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing: Bahrain workshop is little more than a kabuki show

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Gerald Feierstein, Guney Yildiz, Nathan Stock, Elizabeth Dent, and Eran Etzion provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including this week’s Bahrain “workshop” on Palestine’s economic development, an opposition victory in Istanbul’s rerun election, the release of a portion of the Trump administration’s Israel-Palestine peace plan, the fracturing of the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS, and Tuesday’s trilateral meeting between the U.S., Israel, and Russia.

    June 24, 2019

    The stakes are high in Istanbul’s election rerun
    People watch a live broadcast of a televised debate between Istanbul's mayoral candidate Binali Yildirim (R) of Turkey's ruling AKP, and Istanbul's deposed mayor Ekrem Imamoglu (L) of the CHP, is shown on a screen at a tea house in Diyarbakir on June 16, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • The stakes are high in Istanbul’s election rerun

    Istanbulites are only few days away from delivering their verdict on who will run the city for the next five years. The June 23rd election marks the second time in the last three months that local voters will choose their mayor, and the stakes are high for both sides.

    Five scenarios for the US-Iran conflict
    This photo reportedly shows fire and smoke billowing from Norwegian owned Front Altair tanker said to have been attacked in the waters of the Gulf of Oman
  • Analysis
  • Five scenarios for the US-Iran conflict

    The U.S. and Iran are locked in conflict. Regardless of the details or culpability regarding the latest attack on two tankers in the Gulf, the conflict is centered on Washington’s “maximum pressure” campaign and Tehran’s response that it will not sit idly by while its economy is brought to its knees. Paul Salem sketches out five possibilities for where things might be headed.

    June 14, 2019

    Coastal breakdown in Syria creates opportunities for Russia
    Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, Russia's President Vladimir Putin, and Russia's Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu (L-R) at the Russian Hmeimim air base.
  • Analysis
  • Coastal breakdown in Syria creates opportunities for Russia

    The growing power of paramilitary groups and the response of Bashar al-Assad’s foreign backers illustrates how local skirmishes over smuggling routes can have much broader geopolitical implications as Russia gains ground at the expense of both the regime and Iran.

    June 13, 2019

    Saudi Arabia looks abroad to LNG and petrochemicals to hedge its bets
    Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber(R), the director general and CEO of ADNOC, shakes hands with Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser after signing a cooperation deal in Abu Dhabi on November 12, 2018.
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia looks abroad to LNG and petrochemicals to hedge its bets

    In late May, Saudi Aramco signed an agreement to buy 5 million tons per annum of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from San Diego-based Sempra Energy’s planned LNG terminal in Port Arthur, Texas. The deal exemplifies Saudi Aramco’s determination to boost the share of LNG and petrochemicals in its portfolio before its long-awaited public offering in 2021.

    June 5, 2019

    What does Trump’s Golan proclamation mean for UNDOF?
    UNDOF forces stand guard at the entrance to the UN headquarters, in the demilitarized zone, near the Quneitra border crossing in the Israeli annexed Golan Heights on September 5, 2014
  • Analysis
  • What does Trump’s Golan proclamation mean for UNDOF?

    Sometime in June the UN Security Council will vote to approve another six-month renewal of the mandate of the 1000-strong UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) deployed in the Golan Heights. For more than four decades, the UN Security Council has unanimously renewed the mission’s mandate to maintain the ceasefire between Israel and Syria, but this will be the first time it has come up for a vote since President Donald Trump signed a proclamation recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the area of the Golan Heights on March 25th.

    June 3, 2019

    An awkward triangle: Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia
    Saudi flag flying over the gatehouse to the new Saudi consulate headquarters in the high security
  • Analysis
  • An awkward triangle: Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia

    Over the past few months, an awkward courtship has been going on between Iraq and its two most polarizing neighbors, as Tehran and Riyadh attempt to convince Baghdad of the merits of their respective orbits. While both sides make compelling points, the fact is that Iraq is exceedingly happy to occupy the middle ground, geopolitically and economically, between the two regional powers.

    May 23, 2019

    Understanding the Fatemiyoun Division: Life Through the Eyes of a Militia Member
  • Analysis
  • Understanding the Fatemiyoun Division: Life Through the Eyes of a Militia Member

    Approximately 10,000-20,000 Afghan men, mostly from the Hazara ethnic group, have fought in Syria in support of the government of President Bashar al-Assad. Organized by Iran and led by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and other affiliated groups, they have gathered under the banner of the so-called “Fatemiyoun” Division. This is the story of one of those men, Mohammed Jalil Dinsta, told through selections from his writings, alongside relevant analysis.

    May 22, 2019

    The growing economic and political role of Iraq’s PMF
    Members of the the predominantly Shia Muslim PMF take part in a PMF conference to honor Iranian fighters who died fighting ISIS
  • Analysis
  • The growing economic and political role of Iraq’s PMF

    Conditions in Iraq since the defeat of ISIS’s territorial “caliphate” justify both optimism and concern at the same time. One issue where there has been much hand wringing but few practical suggestions for what to do is that of the popular mobilization forces (PMF). As the main campaign against ISIS drew to a close, many of the PMF’s leaders sought to translate their fighters’ battlefield sacrifices into political and economic gains.

    May 21, 2019

    With tensions rising, are we heading toward conflict in the Gulf?
    An F/A-18E Super Hornet from Strike Fighter Squadron 86 launches from the flight deck of the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln May 10, 2019 in the Red Sea.
  • Analysis
  • With tensions rising, are we heading toward conflict in the Gulf?

    Since the Trump administration refused to extend waivers for Iranian oil exports expiring on May 2nd, the U.S. and Iran have engaged in a cycle of escalating threats and actions. The U.S. has further ratcheted up its “maximum pressure” campaign by adding new sanctions, and in the last few days, the turmoil has deepened as the region absorbed reports of mysterious sabotage against tankers in Emirati ports, apparent Houthi drone attacks on Saudi oil facilities, and news that the Trump administration is contemplating substantial deployments of U.S. military personnel to the region.

    May 16, 2019

    If at first you don’t succeed: Turkey gears up for Istanbul election rerun
    Ekrem Imamoglu speaks to press members outside the headquarters of CHP after party's extraordinary caucus meeting in Ankara, Turkey on May 7, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • If at first you don’t succeed: Turkey gears up for Istanbul election rerun

    The March 31st local elections in Turkey were a breath of fresh air for those long resigned to the fact that the ballot box doesn’t matter anymore and that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was invincible. To the surprise of many, the opposition captured all of Turkey’s major cities, but the decision by the Supreme Election Council on May 6th to nullify the results of the Istanbul mayoral election and call for a new vote quickly changed the mood. The election is now set to be rerun on June 23rd.

    Iraq: A Conflict Over State Identity and Ownership
    MOHAMMED SAWAF/AFP/Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • Iraq: A Conflict Over State Identity and Ownership

    At the heart of the conflict in Iraq has been a clash of visions over the identity and ownership of the Iraqi state. The post-2003 conflict was, in effect, a violent renegotiation of both the political compact in place since the 1960s and of the balance of power among regional and international players.

    May 15, 2019

    Challenges threaten the rise of Turkey’s defense industry
    Staff of Turkish Aerospace Industries Inc. works on a helicopter in Ankara, Turkey on July 13, 2018.
  • Analysis
  • Challenges threaten the rise of Turkey’s defense industry

    Building up Turkey’s defense industry has long been a priority for the government, and it has made considerable progress. Turkey is now the world’s 14th largest defense exporter. Despite its success to date, the industry is facing growing pains, and challenges like brain drain, a currency crisis, dependence on foreign suppliers, and regional political disputes could hamper growth going forward.

    May 14, 2019

    Forgotten Lives: Life Under Regime Rule in East Ghouta
    LOUAI BESHARA/AFP/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Forgotten Lives: Life Under Regime Rule in East Ghouta

    A “black hole” of information, East Ghouta is a dark example of the reimposition of the Assad regime’s rule over a community once controlled by the opposition. This paper, produced in association with ETANA Syria, shines a light on what the regime’s military rule looks like on the ground and the resulting human rights violations against the population, and details the scale of the Iranian presence in key strategic locations around Damascus.

    May 14, 2019

    The Middle East and its role in the global economy
    Dubai skyline
  • Analysis
  • The Middle East and its role in the global economy

    Too many of the world’s economies are still struggling. Who right now can help them and in the process most help itself? We suggest it’s the Middle East, but only once the region takes on a long overdue leadership role in the global economy’s financial regulatory and development bodies.

    May 13, 2019