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Ibtihel Bouchoucha

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The Russia-Ukraine war forces Egypt to face the need to feed itself: Infrastructure, international partnerships, and agritech can provide the solutions
Photo by Mahmoud Elkhwas/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Russia-Ukraine war forces Egypt to face the need to feed itself: Infrastructure, international partnerships, and agritech can provide the solutions

    After 500 days of coping with the debilitating impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Egypt’s economy is faltering. At the core of the crisis is its fragile food security. Now, the Egyptian economy is fast approaching a tipping point and Cairo has no alternative but to boost its domestic agrifood production. In addition to building out its infrastructure, Egypt must also adopt cutting-edge agritech solutions to improve the water-use efficiency of the crops themselves.

    Realigning priorities: Egypt's strategic shift toward Qatar, Turkey, and Iran
    Photo by Murat Kula/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Realigning priorities: Egypt's strategic shift toward Qatar, Turkey, and Iran

    While some analysts attribute Egypt’s realignment toward Turkey, Qatar, and Iran to a change in the foreign policies of its influential allies, the UAE and Saudi Arabia, it can be argued that Egypt’s shift is primarily motivated by its domestic dynamics and its unfulfilled foreign policy objectives between 2014 and 2018. Egypt’s realignment, in that sense, seeks to achieve multiple unmet domestic and regional aims.

    July 25, 2023

    Pilgrims and profits: Jordan looks to holy baptism site to boost religious tourism
    Photo courtesy of the author
  • Analysis
  • Pilgrims and profits: Jordan looks to holy baptism site to boost religious tourism

    The Jordanian government has sought to further develop the Bethany Beyond the Jordan baptism site in an effort to boost the tourism sector and the broader economy. But striking the right balance between economic, religious, political, and environmental considerations won’t be easy.

    July 25, 2023

    Changing dynamics reshape power networks in Yemen’s “two Hadramawts”
    Photo by KARIM SAHIB/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Changing dynamics reshape power networks in Yemen’s “two Hadramawts”

    Since 2015, Yemen’s largest governorate, Hadramawt, has been informally divided between two distinct centers of power with different military loyalties and external backing. The balance of power within the governorate is no longer fixed, however. Changes in Hadramawt’s military, political, and economic dynamics are reshaping power networks in the governorate and beyond, with implications for the conflicting agendas of the Saudis, Emiratis, and Houthis.

    July 24, 2023

    Russia, Ukraine, and the Reshuffling of the European Security Order
  • Commentary
  • Russia, Ukraine, and the Reshuffling of the European Security Order

    In a 1994 article for Foreign Affairs, former US national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski famously argued that “without Ukraine, Russia ceases to be an empire.” His analysis is no less valid today.

    At the time, Brzezinski was arguing against the United States pressuring Ukraine to give up its nuclear weapons. It seems reasonable to say that there would be no war in Ukraine today if the country had not done so under the terms of the flawed Budapest Memorandum.

    Turkey's role after the Black Sea grain deal collapse has become even more critical
  • Commentary
  • Turkey's role after the Black Sea grain deal collapse has become even more critical

    During the 500 days since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Middle East avoided a catastrophic food crisis, thanks in part to the Black Sea grain initiative. Russia’s decision to cancel that agreement is raising fears that the return of supply shortages and skyrocketing wheat prices could quickly plunge the most vulnerable countries of the region into crisis.

    France’s Foreign Policy Towards Lebanon and its Discontents
  • Podcast
  • France’s Foreign Policy Towards Lebanon and its Discontents

    MEI U.S.-Lebanon Fellow Fadi Nicholas Nassar is joined by Karim Bitar for a discussion on French foreign policy towards Lebanon. The pair focus on the current state of affairs in Lebanon, historical trends in French policy towards the country and the region, and more in the latest episode of Middle East Focus.

    July 21, 2023

    Climate Change Threatens Turkey’s Role as a Food Supplier to Europe and the Middle East
  • Commentary
  • Climate Change Threatens Turkey’s Role as a Food Supplier to Europe and the Middle East

    The persistence of high food inflation in Turkey belies a deeper problem. Turkish agrifood production cannot adequately cope with increasing water scarcity due to climate change. Challenging Turkey’s own food security, the growing crisis also threatens Turkey’s role as a food supplier to Europe and the Middle East. Regional food supply chain breakdowns due to a decline in Turkish production would create a debilitating economic impact on both regions.

    5 ways the US, Europe can push for Israel-Arab environmental cooperation – opinion
  • Commentary
  • 5 ways the US, Europe can push for Israel-Arab environmental cooperation – opinion

    Environmental challenges are creating new priorities for countries in the Middle East and the Mediterranean and increasing cross-border cooperation – including between Israel and Arab countries. Such cooperation can assist in tackling climate change through a regional and global lens, can foster regional stability, maintain and expand circles of peace and normalization, and increase prosperity and economic development. 

    July 20, 2023

    The new wave of dealmaking by Gulf sovereign wealth funds
    Photo by FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The new wave of dealmaking by Gulf sovereign wealth funds

    For resource-rich countries such as Gulf oil and natural gas producers, sovereign wealth funds have emerged as promising tools to save for future generations, mitigate the effects of outsized economic shocks, and/or be deployed as reserve investment and strategic development funds to spend on human, natural, social, and physical capital.

    In North Africa, Startups and NGOs Drive Local Innovation. What Is Missing?
  • Commentary
  • In North Africa, Startups and NGOs Drive Local Innovation. What Is Missing?

    Innovation is often cited as the prerequisite for development, growth, and prosperity. New ways to improve on existing practices and approaches, curiosity, and the ability to carry that forward into new ideas, discoveries and inventions help economies thrive, populations develop, and lives prosper. In the North African context, innovation is charting an uneven course.  This human ability to improve, build, and innovate is at times fed by state institutions or hindered by them. 

    The state of innovation in North Africa 

    After Jenin, the US should invest more in improving Israeli-Palestinian relations and advancing peace
    Photo by MAJDI MOHAMMED/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • After Jenin, the US should invest more in improving Israeli-Palestinian relations and advancing peace

    Since the current Israeli government was established in December 2022, Israeli-Palestinian escalation has seemed inevitable. Tensions have steadily mounted and if that trend continues unchecked, a wider and more significant flare up might eventually happen. Given the worrying trajectory, the U.S. needs to get more involved.

    July 17, 2023