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Fatima Sadiqi

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Iran-Iraq competition in regional maritime and overland transit corridors
Photo by Iraqi Prime Ministry Press Office / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran-Iraq competition in regional maritime and overland transit corridors

    In recent years, Iraq has become one of the leading destinations for Chinese investments in the Middle East and a crucial link in Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative. To capitalize on its geostrategic location and central position within the Chinese BRI, Iraq is seeking to develop a sprawling new 54-square-kilometer port project, known as al-Faw Grand Port, which will reduce the country’s reliance on Arab Gulf ports and overland transit from Iran and Turkey. The project also underscores Iraq’s growing economic rivalry with neighboring Iran, as both countries seek to carve out a similar niche in handling regional transit traffic.

    April 11, 2023

    On Food and Sustainability: A Conversation with Moza Al Matrooshi and Christian Sleiman
  • Podcast
  • On Food and Sustainability: A Conversation with Moza Al Matrooshi and Christian Sleiman

    Lyne Sneige, Director of the Arts & Culture Program at the Middle East Institute, speaks with artists Moza Al Matrooshi and Christian Sleiman about their works that are featured in MEI’s current exhibition, Perceptible Rhythms/Alternative Temporalities. The conversation provides greater detail on the relationship between each artist’s works and the themes of food and sustainability.

    April 11, 2023

    Chip War, Cold War
    Photo by Adam Glanzman/Bloomberg
  • Commentary
  • Chip War, Cold War

    Washington and Beijing look at emerging technologies as a gateway to the new global order. Beijing wants to become an AI and innovation superpower, while Washington pursues a strategy of “tech containment” against Beijing. Chris Miller’s “Chip War: The Fight for the World’s Most Critical Technology” walks us through the history of the semiconductor industry and could not be more timely in light of the Biden administration’s decision to work with allies such as Japan and the Netherlands to limit China’s access to advanced chips with the strategic objective of slowing down Beijing’s technological innovation.

    Qatar doubles down on LNG amid energy market volatility
    Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Qatar doubles down on LNG amid energy market volatility

    The oil and gas sector has been the dominant driver of Qatar’s economy. Over the years, although that sector has remained the major focus of Qatari investments, the emphasis has increasingly shifted towards the expansion of the country’s gas production and LNG export capacity. While the construction boom ahead of the 2022 FIFA World Cup powered the Qatari economy in recent years, income generated by the expansion of the country’s LNG production and export capacity is likely to drive the economy for many years to come — both despite and partly because of the market turmoil caused by the fallout from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

    Turkish Election Watch: The Week of April 2-9
    Photo by Murat Kula/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Turkish Election Watch: The Week of April 2-9

    Catch up with the latest developments about Turkey’s May elections with weekly updates from MEI’s Turkey Program. In this week’s installment of Turkish Election Watch: Kiliçdaroğlu and the carpet, Erdoğan talks tough to the Americans again, attacks on opposition parties, and coalition politics and the parliamentary elections.

    April 10, 2023

    Press Syndicate elections provide a rare chance for Egypt’s journalists to celebrate
    Photo by MOHAMED EL-SHAHED/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Press Syndicate elections provide a rare chance for Egypt’s journalists to celebrate

    Since Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi took office nearly nine years ago, placing all forms of media under total state control has been a top priority. So when seasoned opposition journalist Khaled el-Balshy narrowly won the Egyptian Press Syndicate election on March 17, it was considered a major surprise, and provided a glimmer of hope for weakened opponents that they could still challenge the heavy-handed tactics of the state.

    April 7, 2023

    Pakistan tilts back to the West in multipolar era
    Photo by EDUARDO MUNOZ/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan tilts back to the West in multipolar era

    The multipolar moment has arrived in Pakistan’s backyard. Like China and India, Pakistan too is attempting its own geopolitical rebalancing. It seeks to revive ties with the United States and other Western countries. This pivot to the West comes after an earlier one to the East that began more than a decade ago. But, like the previous pivot, Pakistan’s efforts to rekindle ties with the West are unlikely to succeed unless it embraces the imperatives of economic reform and political stability.

    April 6, 2023

    How to Advance US-Saudi Defense Cooperation
  • Commentary
  • How to Advance US-Saudi Defense Cooperation

    Saudi Arabia has made it clear that it wants a defense pact with the United States in return for normalizing ties with Israel. However, that isn’t a price Washington is able or willing to accept, for both political and strategic reasons. But the conversation about improved U.S.-Saudi defense cooperation shouldn’t stop here. There’s plenty of room for achieving that objective without having to upgrade the relationship to a full-fledged alliance.

    Iranian-Saudi detente and "Asianization" of the Persian Gulf: China fills the gap
    Photo by ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iranian-Saudi detente and "Asianization" of the Persian Gulf: China fills the gap

    After an intense round of secret negotiations between Iranian and Saudi representatives, facilitated by Chinese mediation, Tehran and Riyadh announced in mid-March that they would resume diplomatic relations. It is unclear if the Saudi-Iranian détente will last, but at least for now, China’s role in resolving this diplomatic stalemate seems to indicate the beginning of a multi-faceted de-Westernization process in the region.

    April 5, 2023

    China and the Saudi-Iran rapprochement: Implications for Yemen
    Photo by MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • China and the Saudi-Iran rapprochement: Implications for Yemen

    The conclusion of the China-brokered Saudi-Iranian détente on March 10, which aims to thaw long-standing enmity and manage competition between the two regional arch rivals, has multi-layered implications for Yemen.

    April 5, 2023

    Dispatches from Delhi: India and the changing global order
    Photo by Sanchit Khanna/Hindustan Times via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Dispatches from Delhi: India and the changing global order

    Delhi is one of the few capitals around the world that offers a representative view of the global order. After engaging with a wide variety of Indian policymakers and public intellectuals during a recent visit to India’s capital, I walked away with a better understanding of how Delhi is grappling with some of the main global issues.

    A new Asian order is emerging
  • Commentary
  • A new Asian order is emerging

    By redefining and expanding the Asia-Pacific’s geopolitical dimensions, Abe Shinzō, the late Japanese prime minister, offered a geostrategic model that is now being realized across South Asia and the Middle East. With India at the center of this emerging West Asian ecosystem, Abe’s vision has begun to take shape.