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Guita Hourani

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Egypt’s Economic Challenges
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Economic Challenges

    Reporting on Egypt since the July 3 ouster of former president Mohamed Morsi has focused on political dimensions and unrest. However, it is the new government’s success—or lack thereof—in meeting the country’s economic challenges that will largely determine whether Egypt returns to stability, just as surely as it was Egypt’s economic woes that underpinned the country’s repudiation of Morsi.

    November 8, 2013

    Syria and Geneva II
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Syria and Geneva II

    Senior diplomats from the United States, Russia, and the UN failed this week to agree on the details and date for a Geneva II meeting to help resolve the Syrian crisis. UN and Arab League Special Envoy Lakhdar Brahimi had hoped to hold the meeting in late November, but admitted that it might have to be put off until early 2014. Obstacles included disagreement over the participation of Iran and over the role of Syrian president Assad in the process, as well as disunity among the opposition.

    November 7, 2013

    Comparative Middle Power Diplomacies: Turkey and Japan
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Comparative Middle Power Diplomacies: Turkey and Japan

    Middle power is an opaque term that involves multiple concepts. Through different conceptualizations of the term, Turkey and Japan are both middle powers. Indeed, widely read textbooks about Turkish foreign policy published around 2000 regard Turkey as a middle power. In the Japanese context, several scholars, including Yonosuke Nagai, Yoshikazu Sakamoto, Nobuya Banba, and Mitsuru Yamamoto, have evaluated the foreign policy of their own country as middle power diplomacy since the late 1970s. Recently, Yoshihide Soeya comprehensively summed up Japanese middle power diplomacy after the 1970s.

    November 7, 2013

    Turkey-Singapore Relations: A Manifestation of Turkey’s Growing Interest in SE Asia
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Turkey-Singapore Relations: A Manifestation of Turkey’s Growing Interest in SE Asia

    The content and scope of Turkish foreign policy has dramatically altered since the Justice and Development Party (AKP) came to power in 2002. The Asia-Pacific region, which was previously a low priority in Turkey’s foreign policy calculations, is gaining increased space within Turkey’s general strategy and long-term planning, and is seen as vital to the growth of its small to medium sized firms, upon which the wealth of Turkey’s growing middle class is based.

    November 5, 2013

    Turkey and Indonesia: Historical Roots, Contemporary Business Links
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Turkey and Indonesia: Historical Roots, Contemporary Business Links

    Though sympathy between Turkey and Indonesia has a long tradition, in part based on their shared experience of being Muslim-majority countries that successfully executed anti-imperialist struggles, for years this sympathy has failed to translate into a closer relationship. This is now changing. New economic linkages and the relative absence of thorny political issues are bringing them closer together. As President Abdullah Gül stated during a meeting in Jakarta in 2011, “A new era is beginning with Indonesia.” Economic agents such as businessmen and entrepreneurs are the pioneers of this era.

    November 4, 2013

    Resolving Turkey's "Kurdish Problem"
  • Analysis
  • Resolving Turkey's "Kurdish Problem"

    This article originally appeared on CNN.com.

    The latest round of peace talks with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) remains the Turkish government’s best bet not just to solve the country’s 29-year old “Kurdish problem” but also to feed its energy-hungry population and wean it off costly and politically risky Russian and Iranian energy imports.

    Maliki in Washington: Arms Deals, Politics, and Proxy Wars
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Maliki in Washington: Arms Deals, Politics, and Proxy Wars

    Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is in Washington this week for meetings with Vice President Joe Biden, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, and President Barack Obama. We sat down with MEI’s Vice President for Policy and Research, Paul Salem, to discuss the topics on the table, what each side hopes to accomplish, and how the United States should approach Iraq.

    What is Maliki looking to accomplish?

    October 31, 2013

    Saudi Arabia & the Arab Gulf’s Disappointment with U.S. Policy
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia & the Arab Gulf’s Disappointment with U.S. Policy

    Whether Saudi Arabia takes a seat on the United Nations Security Council or not, the initial snub is aimed primarily at the United States. In particular, U.S.-Saudi relations are in for an exceptionally difficult period—perhaps a return to the policies of King Faisal bin Abdulaziz. It appears that Saudi Arabia and the Arab Gulf now share the view of Sir Charles Johnston, a British diplomat in the 1960s, who offered the following assessment of U.S.

    October 28, 2013

    An Alternative Partner to the West? Turkey’s Growing Relations with China
  • Analysis
  • An Alternative Partner to the West? Turkey’s Growing Relations with China

    The relationship between Turkey and China has rarely been a point of focus for international observers in the early twenty-first century. However, the landscape has recently undergone a dramatic change, with increasing numbers of symposiums, forums, panels, articles, columns, think tanks, and researchers focusing on Sino-Turkish relations in China or in Turkey. The change is mostly due to the impressive rise of both Turkey and China as powers on the regional and global level, respectively. Today, Turkey is the sixteenth largest economy and China the second largest. At the same time, they are more ardently looking at and listening to each other.

    October 25, 2013

    Women & the Fight for Bodily Integrity in Egypt
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Women & the Fight for Bodily Integrity in Egypt

    The struggle for bodily integrity—a right broadly defined as the inviolability of the human body and the self-determination of humans over their bodies—has been at the center of revolutionary aspirations in Egypt. Sexual assaults, arbitrary arrests, and torture by security forces; corrupt and defunct state healthcare systems; the abuse of agricultural subsidies resulting in innutritious food products—all of these are realities that took a painful physical toll on Egyptians and helped drive them to demand an end to Mubarak’s regime.

    October 24, 2013

    Syria's Rebels: Radicalization and Division
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Syria's Rebels: Radicalization and Division

    Last month, when Secretary of State John Kerry sought to dispel the mounting skepticism of lawmakers over the advisability of launching punitive air strikes against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad, he portrayed the rebel fighters in the Western and Gulf-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA) as pluralistic and democratic, distinguishing them from jihadi groups and hard-line Islamists.[1]

    October 21, 2013