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Attiya Ahmad

Post-Doctoral Fellow

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Attiya Ahmad is Georgetown University’s 2009-10 Center for International and Regional Studies Post-Doctoral Fellow. She recently completed her PhD in Cultural Anthropology at Duke University. Dr. Ahmad’s work brings together scholarship on Islamic studies, globalization, diaspora and migration studies, economic anthropology, and political economy.

 

The Latest from Attiya Ahmad

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Saudis in charge: Managing OPEC+’s unhappy days
Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Saudis in charge: Managing OPEC+’s unhappy days

    The current complex situation in the global oil market seriously tests the abilities of OPEC+ to play the role of a regulator, forcing Saudi Arabia to assume the main burden of responsibility for keeping oil prices from declining further and for shoring up the cartel ranks.

    The U.S. and EU Should Coordinate their Saudi and Israeli-Palestinian Efforts
  • Commentary
  • The U.S. and EU Should Coordinate their Saudi and Israeli-Palestinian Efforts

    American and European eyes are set on Riyadh. Both the Biden administration and the European External Action Service are currently trying to advance policy moves that involve Saudi Arabia and that – if successful – will reshape the Middle East. Alas, when it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian issue, these European and American efforts are quite different, and even seem contradictory.

    June 29, 2023

    Middle East futures will pivot on women
    Photo by Lynsey Addario/Getty Images Reportage
  • Analysis
  • Middle East futures will pivot on women

    Gender parity in the Middle East is still many decades away, but it will largely determine the future of economic, social, cultural, and political development in the region.

    June 28, 2023

    The US and France must push back on Iran to break Lebanon’s political gridlock
    Photo by Bilal Jawich/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The US and France must push back on Iran to break Lebanon’s political gridlock

    Jean-Yves Le Drian, French President Emmanuel Macron’s envoy to Lebanon, made a preliminary diplomatic visit to Beirut last week. Le Drian’s appointment marks a potential though uncertain opening to consolidate international support for Lebanon to facilitate an end to the political gridlock and leadership vacuum. A short but timely boost in robust diplomacy on the part of Washington, strengthened by clear coordination with Paris and regional partners, can play a decisive role in preventing the unraveling of another failed authoritarian state that could further destabilize the region and force even more costly engagement in the future.

    The Taliban’s unsustainable war on drugs
  • Commentary
  • The Taliban’s unsustainable war on drugs

    According to multiple media reports, Taliban anti-narcotics units have managed to effect a drastic reduction in opium cultivation in Afghanistan. Assisted by armed Taliban soldiers, stick-wielding personnel are hopping from one opium-growing field to another, destroying standing crops in a large number of provinces. Overseen by international media, such operations may have resulted in an almost 80 percent reduction in opium cultivation this year in the country, which not long ago accounted for 85 percent of the world’s opium.

    June 27, 2023

    Lessons from Syria's aid response: The case for continued cross-border operations
    Photo by AHMAD AL-ATRASH/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Lessons from Syria's aid response: The case for continued cross-border operations

    Another United Nations Security Council (UNSC) vote on continuing the resolution that allows Syria’s cross-border aid delivery is due in July, but the regime’s use of “consent” to allow an extra two crossings from Turkey into the area could be used to undermine the resolution’s necessity, which would risk destabilizing the conflict along with it. Twelve years of hard-won lessons show that until there is a broader political agreement with clear guardrails and guarantees, only a UNSC resolution that permits unimpeded humanitarian access to northwest Syria can secure the critical and consistent operational space required to meet the region’s growing needs as articulated by the NGOs working in the area. 

    Saudi LNG exports: Overcoming challenges to commercial success
    Photographer: Maya Sidiqqui/Bloomberg
  • Analysis
  • Saudi LNG exports: Overcoming challenges to commercial success

    After issuing positive statements around greenfield blue hydrogen projects in late 2022, the company, Bloomberg now reports, may be migrating away from the hydrogen scheme and toward LNG exports. Both would require significant capital investment. Assuming the company decides to pursue an LNG export project, it will face many potentially value-erosive challenges and risks that must be overcome before achieving economic success.

    June 27, 2023

    How the rumble in Russia reverberates around the Middle East
    Photo by STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • How the rumble in Russia reverberates around the Middle East

    It is too early to tell whether the Wagner “uprising” is a one-off or foreshadows further cracks and the eventual collapse of Putin’s presidency, but the latter outcome would have lasting consequences in the MENA region.

    June 26, 2023

    Libya’s ongoing debate over the role of political parties
    Photo by Hazem Turkia/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Libya’s ongoing debate over the role of political parties

    Libya’s political players have grappled with how to build a political party culture since the country held its first post-Gadhafi elections in 2012. Under Moammar Gadhafi, political organizing was banned. Decades of regime propaganda against outlawed opposition movements made Libyans suspicious of political groups and parties. 

    June 26, 2023