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Sara Sadek

Affiliated Researcher and Coordinator

Expertise

Egypt, Iraq, Sudan

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Sara Sadek is an affiliated researcher and coordinator at the Center for Migration and Refugee Studies (CMRS) at the American University in Cairo. She obtained an MA in Refugee Studies from the University of East London. Since 2005, she has worked on  various research projects on Iraqi and Sudanese communities in Egypt, contributing to a report on Iraqis in Egypt and recently producing a paper on challenges of  integration for Iraqis in Arab states for the Henry L. Stimson Center’s forthcoming volume Transnational Challenges.

The Latest from Sara Sadek

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Iran-US negotiations 2021: No 2015 redux by the standards of the Iranian economy
Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Iran-US negotiations 2021: No 2015 redux by the standards of the Iranian economy

    The core question for Iran watchers this year is the likelihood and nature of a renewed Iranian nuclear deal. However, the circumstances are very different and the respective bargaining power of the two sides does not mirror the negotiations in 2015. In particular, the macroeconomic backdrop is considerably worse today and the regime more desperate for sanctions relief than it seems.

    February 3, 2021

    The Riyadh Agreement: Yemen’s new cabinet and what remains to be done
  • Analysis
  • The Riyadh Agreement: Yemen’s new cabinet and what remains to be done

    On December 18, Yemeni President Abed Rabbu Mansour Hadi announced a new cabinet as part of his efforts to implement the political annex of the Riyadh Agreement (RA) signed on November 5, 2019 between the Republic of Yemen Government (ROYG) and the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC). The agreement included several political, security and economic provisions such as: the formation of a new government that includes the STC; the disarmament and integration of militias and military formations under the auspices of the ministries of defense and interior; support of the Yemeni economy; and the demilitarization of Aden.

    February 1, 2021

    The Turkey-Pakistan entente: Muslim middle powers align in Eurasia
  • Analysis
  • The Turkey-Pakistan entente: Muslim middle powers align in Eurasia

    In the 1950s, at the onset of the Cold War, Pakistan and Turkey were part of the Central Treaty Organization or CENTO, a pro-Western bloc of Muslim-majority states. Today, the two countries — both with troubled relations with the United States — are Muslim middle powers with a growing entente in a multipolar Eurasia. In recent years, cooperation between Pakistan and Turkey has strengthened not just in the defense, diplomatic, and economic realms, but also in the cultural space, causing geopolitical ripple effects in the Himalayas, the Arabian Peninsula, and the South Caucasus.

    January 29, 2021

    The Biden Administration’s Eastern Europe Policy: New Hope for Georgia?
  • Analysis
  • The Biden Administration’s Eastern Europe Policy: New Hope for Georgia?

    Georgia’s Western future became a central part of U.S. foreign policy last week. During his confirmation hearing, Secretary of State Antony Blinken reiterated that Georgia should join NATO as soon as it meets the criteria. Blinken’s remarks are timely. Georgia faces increasing Russian political pressure and military presence, exacerbated by the recent second Nagorno Karabakh war. At the same time, and following a decade of stalemate, there have been significant breakthroughs in the cases brought by Georgia against Russia in front of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) and the International Criminal Court (ICC). With Georgia’s Western path resurfacing on the international agenda, Eastern European countries will be watching to see if the Biden Administration’s foreign policy can make a difference to regional security.

    The inaction trap: Paralysis and denial in Lebanese politics
    Photo by Lebanese Presidency / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The inaction trap: Paralysis and denial in Lebanese politics

    Saturday marks the 100th day since Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri secured a razor-thin majority nomination to form a new cabinet — his fourth in 11 years. In October 2019, street protests had forced his “national unity” government to resign. His comeback a year later was a cause for disillusionment among protesters and a signal that politics as usual, in its collusive and inefficient nature, was there to stay. The absurdity of the Lebanese debacle lies in how easy and acceptable it was — and still is — for the established political class to shy away from crucial and courageous decisions when the country needed them most.

    January 29, 2021

    Inside Syria's Clapping Chamber: Dynamics of the 2020 Parliamentary Elections
  • Analysis
  • Inside Syria's Clapping Chamber: Dynamics of the 2020 Parliamentary Elections

    This report discusses the results of the 2020 Syrian parliamentary elections to illuminate shifts in the al-Assad regime’s strategy to restore and maintain control over the country. Using evidence gathered from a range of sources, it sheds light on recent changes in the ethnic, religious, political, commercial, and military networks through which Syria’s dictatorship is sustained, and the future directions these shifts imply.

    January 28, 2021

    Regional tensions and proxy conflict
  • Podcast
  • Regional tensions and proxy conflict

    MEI’s Paul Salem and Ross Harrison join host Alistair Taylor to discuss what the Biden Administration can do to reduce regional tensions and proxy conflicts in the Middle East.

    January 28, 2021

    الواقع في العراق وسياسة تويتر لحظر الحسابات
  • Video
  • الواقع في العراق وسياسة تويتر لحظر الحسابات

    آراء من واشنطن: حلقة 3

    الواقع في العراق وسياسة تويتر لحظر الحسابات

    يناقش إبراهيم الأصيل رأيين لرندا سليم ومايك سيكستون، عن الواقع في العراق وسياسة تويتر لحظر حسابات السياسيين. شاركونا بآرائكم!

    January 28, 2021