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Shahmahmood Miakhel

Country Director, Afghanistan

Expertise

Afghanistan

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Shahmahmood Miakhel is the Country Director in Afghanistan for the US Institute of Peace (USIP). Prior to that he was a Governance Advisor for the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), and, from 2003–2005, a Deputy Minister of the Interior in the Government of Afghanistan. In 1994–1995 he worked for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) in South and Southeast Afghanistan helping to establish District Rehabilitation Shuras (DRS). He also worked as a reporter for the Pashto service of the Voice of America from 1985–1990.

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What a new Iran nuclear deal really requires
  • Commentary
  • What a new Iran nuclear deal really requires

    To get Washington’s Gulf partners on board, Biden needs an actual strategy for protecting them and ways to make them contribute to it.

    January 28, 2021

    Ethiopia’s domestic problems risk becoming international
  • Analysis
  • Ethiopia’s domestic problems risk becoming international

    In Egypt, Ethiopia, and Sudan, coverage of negotiations around the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) has tended to consistently be in the news over the past few years. The events of the last few weeks, however, have easily pushed GERD talks to the side. On Nov. 4, 2020, Ethiopian federal government forces started pounding the Tigray region, one of 10 semiautonomous regions in the country, after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed accused the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) of attacking a federal base. Relations had been disintegrating after Abiy cancelled elections, due to COVID, that would have marked the end of his term. While most of Ethiopia’s ethnic minorities took umbrage, the TPLF went a step further by holding their own elections, the results of which were declared null and void by the federal government.

    The Challenge of Foreign Fighters: Repatriating and Prosecuting ISIS Detainees
    Photo by FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Challenge of Foreign Fighters: Repatriating and Prosecuting ISIS Detainees

    From the U.S. and the U.K. to Iraq and Syria, the way countries are handling the repatriation and prosecution of accused ISIS members echoes the policies that drove their citizens to seek a utopian Islamic State in the first place. Not only are the policies that pushed people to start joining the group in 2013 continuing, but in many cases they have increased in both scale and scope. While the current repatriation and prosecution policies are arguably counterproductive, they may also be fueling future terrorist activity and support for radical anti-government groups. To reduce the chances of such negative consequences, foreign governments must switch gears and adopt an entirely different approach before it is too late.

    January 27, 2021

    Understanding the Emirati-Greek relationship
    Photo from Greek Prime Minister's Office
  • Analysis
  • Understanding the Emirati-Greek relationship

    In mid-January the press reported that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) will soon participate in a joint military exercise with the United States, Canada, Slovakia, Spain, Cyprus, and Israel. While Israel’s inclusion is certainly newsworthy, it is also quite significant that the drill will take place in and be coordinated by Greece. This is just the latest step in a long process of engagement between Athens and Abu Dhabi.

    January 27, 2021

    At least they’re talking: Turkey and Greece resume negotiations, but don’t hold your breath on a breakthrough
    Photo by Turkish Foreign Ministry/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • At least they’re talking: Turkey and Greece resume negotiations, but don’t hold your breath on a breakthrough

    Turkey’s efforts to strike a different tone were apparent on Jan. 25 in Istanbul, when Greek and Turkish officials resumed talks after a five-year gap to calm tensions in the Aegean and Mediterranean. The fact that the parties met is welcome news after the two came to the brink of war recently over offshore energy exploitation rights, but no one expected a breakthrough. The tensions between the two countries have a long history and the issues dividing Athens and Ankara are too deep to bridge.

    Can US CENTCOM afford Israel?
  • Commentary
  • Can US CENTCOM afford Israel?

    With the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco signing normalisation agreements with Israel last year, the road to Israel’s integration into Centcom was paved.

    “The New Algeria” and China
    (JASON LEE/AFP via Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • “The New Algeria” and China

    Given the host of challenges that Algeria currently faces and consistent with past efforts to diversify its foreign relations, Algeria could seek to deepen its relationship with China — a rising global power with deep pockets and an expanding footprint in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region and a country with which Algeria has already established a comprehensive strategic partnership. Yet, even under a scenario in which Beijing answers the call, it should not be assumed that the scale and contours of Chinese engagement will fundamentally change, will consist mainly of predatory economic activities and malign influences, or can rescue Algeria from structural problems of its own making.

    سوريا تواجه أزمة تلوح في الأفق بشأن وصول المُساعدات الإنسانية
  • Commentary
  • سوريا تواجه أزمة تلوح في الأفق بشأن وصول المُساعدات الإنسانية

    خلال جلسة مجلس الأمن الدولي، التابع للأُمم المُتحدة، والتي انعقدت في 20 يناير 2021، وصف المبعوث الأممي لسوريا، غيير بيدرسِن، ما يحدث في سوريا من انهيار اقتصادي، ومُعاناة إنسانية، وركود للعملية السياسية، على أنه “تسونامي بطيء يجتاح الآن جميع أنحاء سوريا”؛ ما جذب اهتماما أصبح نادرا بشأن الوضع في سوريا.

    Monday Briefing: Biden administration sends mixed signals on Afghanistan
    Photo by WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Monday Briefing: Biden administration sends mixed signals on Afghanistan

    Contents:

    Biden administration sends mixed signals on Afghanistan

    Marvin G. Weinbaum
    Director, Afghanistan and Pakistan Studies

    جلسة استماع الكونغرس للمُصادقة على تعيين بلينكن: سياسة الثواب والعقاب في الشرق الأوسط
  • Commentary
  • جلسة استماع الكونغرس للمُصادقة على تعيين بلينكن: سياسة الثواب والعقاب في الشرق الأوسط

    “أوضحت شهادة بلينكن أن نهج إدارة بايدن تجاه الشرق الأوسط سيكون إلى حد كبير عودة إلى الأوضاع الطبيعية”.

    January 25, 2021

    الحظر يصل إلى إيران
  • Commentary
  • الحظر يصل إلى إيران

    باحث ومدير برنامج الفضاء الإلكتروني بمعهد الشرق الأوسط

    January 25, 2021

    Syria faces a looming crisis over humanitarian aid access
    Photo by AAREF WATAD/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Syria faces a looming crisis over humanitarian aid access

    Should nothing change, the loss of cross-border aid access and the absence of cross-line mechanisms to northern Syria could potentially leave over 4.5 million civilians without assistance — a humanitarian catastrophe of unprecedented proportions.

    Political football: How the Iranian government intervenes in sports
  • Analysis
  • Political football: How the Iranian government intervenes in sports

    Because of football’s popularity, there is significant involvement by regime insiders. The Revolutionary Guards’ transition from barracks to boardrooms began back in the mid-1990s, when they took on management roles in some of the country’s most high-profile sports. Sports were not high on the agenda for the revolutionaries who overthrew the Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in 1979, but as sports has grown in popularity and in profitability, it has become increasingly politicized.  Over the past two decades, most sports clubs and related bodies have been taken over by political or security-military organizations, with former Revolutionary Guards holding the top positions.

    January 25, 2021