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The Military Muzzling of Thailand and the Quandary of Demilitarization
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Military Muzzling of Thailand and the Quandary of Demilitarization

    Over a year has passed since the latest military coup in Thailand. On May 22, 2014, then-Army Commander Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha led a putsch against civilian Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. The coup followed six months of demonstrations against Yingluck and her brother, fugitive ex-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The protests, centered in Bangkok, were reportedly protected by military elements.

    July 29, 2015

    The Truth in Criticisms of the Iran Deal
  • Analysis
  • The Truth in Criticisms of the Iran Deal

    This article was first published on Peacefare.net.

    Here are some criticisms of the Iran deal that contain at least a kernel of truth; they are worth addressing for the sake of clarifying some of the arguments pro and con.

    July 29, 2015

    Responding to Assaults on Health Care in the Middle East
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Responding to Assaults on Health Care in the Middle East

    The conflicts and political crises in the Middle East have brought anguish, suffering, and severe declines in health to people throughout the region. The most catastrophic case by far is Syria, where more than a million people have experienced traumatic injuries, once-rare infectious diseases have returned, chronic disease goes untreated, and the health system has collapsed. In Yemen, Libya, Gaza, and Iraq as well, violence has limited access to health care and grievously harmed the population.

    July 28, 2015

    Improved Egypt-Israel Relations through Sinai Crisis: Will They Last?
  • Analysis
  • Improved Egypt-Israel Relations through Sinai Crisis: Will They Last?

    Egyptian diplomats rarely have a good word to say about U.S. policies these days. In contrast, they are enthusiastic in their praise of the close relations between Cairo and Jerusalem—centered on counterterror security and intelligence cooperation in Sinai—and effusive in their acknowledgement of Israel’s response to the bloody insurgency there, led by Egypt’s ISIS affiliate in the “Sinai Province,” Ansar Beit al-Maqdis.

    “Relations with Israel are great,” observed an Egyptian official recently.[1]

    July 24, 2015

    Salafism Infiltrates Turkish Religious Discourse
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Salafism Infiltrates Turkish Religious Discourse

    Salafi discourse has made considerable inroads in Turkey over the past 30 years, making contributions to sectarianism in ways that have yet to be fully studied and understood.

    July 23, 2015

    Caring for the Most Vulnerable Populations Affected by Conflict in the Middle East
  • Analysis
  • Caring for the Most Vulnerable Populations Affected by Conflict in the Middle East

    Imagine your child is bleeding from a severe wound. The hospital lacks the necessary medical equipment to stop it, and you are told that amputation is the only option, but the hospital has no anesthesia. Imagine losing a newborn baby, not for any medical reason, but because a power outage cut off the heat to your child’s incubator. Sadly, these are not infrequent tragedies in a number of Middle Eastern countries. In Syria, as in other areas of conflict across the region, it’s not just bombs, bullets, and shells that are killing and maiming children and others.

    July 22, 2015

    Liberalism in the Arab World: Accounts from the Region
  • Analysis
  • Liberalism in the Arab World: Accounts from the Region

    Ismael Mohammed of Egypt recalls the moment he lost his religion. It happened four years ago, at the age of 26, when he heard about the theory of evolution for the first time. He had come across it online by watching YouTube videos and reading all the material he could fit through Google Translate. He sent query emails to evolution scientists around the world, asking them if what they were saying was true. Some responded, sending him the nuts and bolts of Darwin’s work.

    July 21, 2015

    The Syrian Refugee Crisis: What’s Next?
  • Analysis
  • The Syrian Refugee Crisis: What’s Next?

    “What’s going to happen to the Syrian refugees?” This was the question I asked of everyone I met during a recent trip to Lebanon and Turkey to research Syrian displacement. Without exception, those I asked—government and UN officials, academics, business and NGO representatives, Syrian diaspora groups, and Syrian refugees—responded with the same answer: “I don’t know” (or sometimes “‘God only knows”). When pressed, almost everyone said that the war in Syria would continue for the foreseeable future and that more people would likely leave or try to leave.

    July 20, 2015

    Sectarianism and the Search for New Political Orders in the Arab World
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Sectarianism and the Search for New Political Orders in the Arab World

    In many Arab countries, the homogenizing, authoritarian, centralized state is a relic of a bygone past. However, what will replace it is not yet clear. The popular Arab uprisings that exploded in December 2010, and their overlap with already-underway geopolitical battles unleashed by the 2003 U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq, combined to torpedo the political orders of a number of Arab states.

    July 17, 2015

    Yes, Talk with Syria’s Ahrar al-Sham
  • Analysis
  • Yes, Talk with Syria’s Ahrar al-Sham

    Probably the most important group fighting the Syrian regime now is Ahrar al-Sham (Free Men of the Levant), a Salafi group fighting mainly in the north but also in central and southern Syria. Contrary to Western reports suggesting that the al-Qa‘ida-linked Nusra Front led the battle to capture the northwestern Syrian provincial capital of Idlib last March, Ahrar had more fighters in the battle—a fact demonstrated by its predominance in the subsequent military oversight council established for Idlib.

    From Nonintervention to What?: Analyzing the Change in China’s Middle East Policy
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • From Nonintervention to What?: Analyzing the Change in China’s Middle East Policy

    Though China still adheres to the principle of nonintervention, its unprecedented proactivity and break from its position to “pursue friendly, cooperative relations with all Middle Eastern countries” has already distinguished its behavior in the Syria crisis from its traditional stance.

    July 15, 2015

    Iran Nuclear Deal: A Platform for Future Cooperation?
  • Analysis
  • Iran Nuclear Deal: A Platform for Future Cooperation?

    MEI interviewed Senior Fellow Alex Vatanka about the historic nuclear agreement between Iran and the P5+1 that was reached on July 14, 2015, and how it may impact regional dynamics and the long-term relationship between Iran and the West.

    What has been the reaction to the nuclear deal?

    Arab Armed Forces: State Makers or State Breakers?
  • Analysis
  • Arab Armed Forces: State Makers or State Breakers?

    Proliferation and intensification of coercive force in the Arab world since 2011, combined with apparent decay of Arab states, seems at first glance to run counter to the implicit predictions of two relevant bodies of literature.

    July 14, 2015