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The Syrian Druze at a Crossroads
  • Analysis
  • The Syrian Druze at a Crossroads

    In the last few weeks, the Syrian Druze have been a focal point in significant fighting on the ground. If their role in the fighting continues, or even if it changes, the Druze will likely have a profound impact on the trajectory of the Syrian conflict.

    July 13, 2015

    Activism and Engagement: Envisioning a Possible New Doctrine for Indonesia’s Middle East Policy
  • Analysis
  • Activism and Engagement: Envisioning a Possible New Doctrine for Indonesia’s Middle East Policy

    The Asia-Pacific region, exemplified by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries, has been the cornerstone of Indonesia’s foreign policy, with relationships in the Middle East being of secondary importance. Nevertheless, Indonesia has worked for years to develop fruitful bilateral relations with Arab countries in the economic, religious, and educational spheres.

    July 9, 2015

    The Humanitarian Crisis in the Middle East: Highlights from the MEI Conference
  • Analysis
  • The Humanitarian Crisis in the Middle East: Highlights from the MEI Conference

    For decades, most refugee crises followed a pattern: A war erupted, usually in a poor country, and beleaguered civilians staggered across the nearest border. The United Nations organized a response, rich nations footed the bill, and aid groups sent in workers to tend to the needy. Even in extreme cases, such as the mass exodus from Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion in the 1980s, the crisis was largely confined to the country at war and a few immediate neighbors.

    July 9, 2015

    The Promise of Arab Youth: Gone Today, Here Tomorrow
  • Analysis
  • The Promise of Arab Youth: Gone Today, Here Tomorrow

    After the latest attacks in Tunisia, Kuwait, Paris, and Sinai, attention is focused once again on the threat posed by the radicalization of youth. Indeed, Arab youth do represent a threat—to the established order. They came out in their millions in 2011 to demand freedom, dignity, and jobs, and these demands will not go away. They have been pushed back out of the public space by older institutions reviving fights between state authoritarianism and dreams of a caliphate, and indeed some youth, out of frustration, will radicalize and turn to violence.

    July 7, 2015

    Egypt’s Mahragan: Music of the Masses
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Mahragan: Music of the Masses

    For Egypt’s low-income majority, weddings are the prime source of group entertainment, celebrated like block parties in cramped streets decorated with arabesque tapestries and drenched in colored lights and sound. You won’t hear romantic crooning at these gatherings; in Cairo’s densely-inhabited popular quarters, wedding parties are more akin to raves. The music is raw synthetic beat embroidered with syncopated tabla (Egyptian drum) samples and queasy electronic loops.

    July 7, 2015

    Collection Spotlight: Water in the Middle East
  • Analysis
  • Collection Spotlight: Water in the Middle East

    For many, an interest in the natural resources of the Middle East begins and ends with oil. However, in a region where systems of agriculture and manufacturing are threatened by increasing desertification and pervasive aridity, the amount, distribution, and control of water is drawing increased international attention.

    July 1, 2015

    Tweeting Terrorist Attacks in the U.S. and Europe
  • Analysis
  • Tweeting Terrorist Attacks in the U.S. and Europe

    Social globalization has brought groups with different values and worldviews into contact with each other—in a physical and institutional sense to be sure, but also in the sense that the international exchange of ideas, information, and images has increased. This exchange occurs in both directions; American readers can reflect on the fervor in U.S.

    July 1, 2015

    Keynote Address: Countering Violent Extremism
  • Analysis
  • Keynote Address: Countering Violent Extremism

    Thank you. It’s a pleasure to be here to open this important event.

    As I started to think about what I wanted to say today, a series of events came to mind: Fort Hood, Texas, 2009; Times Square, New York City, 2010; Boston, 2013; Paris last January; Madrid 2004; and London 2005. I also thought of Oklahoma City in 1995, Oslo and Utoya Island in 2011, and the Sikh Temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin in 2012. Each involved citizens or residents of the country concerned.

    July 1, 2015

    Countering Violence Extremism: Local and Global Approaches — Welcome Remarks
  • Analysis
  • Countering Violence Extremism: Local and Global Approaches — Welcome Remarks

    Esteemed Colleagues, Ladies, and Gentlemen,

    On behalf of the EU Head of Delegation and Ambassador David O’Sullivan, I would like to thank The Middle East Institute and the Fondation pour la Recherche Stratégique for organizing this conference and for their efforts in leading this dialogue on countering violent extremism.

    July 1, 2015

    Saudi Arabia's Quagmire
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia's Quagmire

    Read the full article on LobeLog.

    Three months after Saudi Arabia rounded up a few allies and began an intensive bombing campaign against the rebels known as Houthis across the border in Yemen, a conventional wisdom has developed. “It has not worked,” as The New York Times put it in a front-page article, and it probably can’t work because the strategic goals are too murky, the factions are too entrenched, the rivalries are too intense, and the conflict is too complicated to be resolved by a simplistic solution.

    July 1, 2015

    Asia’s Role in the Mideast Solar Surge
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Asia’s Role in the Mideast Solar Surge

    Renewable energy accounts for an ever-growing share of worldwide electricity generation capacity. Solar power, in particular, is on the rise globally. Indeed, within a decade solar power could become the most inexpensive source of electricity in many regions, including in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). This essay examines the growth trajectory of solar energy in the MENA region and its relationship to developments in Asian, notably Chinese and Japanese, solar markets.

    Hope amid Despair: Syrian Civil Society
  • Analysis
  • Hope amid Despair: Syrian Civil Society

    Despite the barrel bombs and chlorine gas, despite the threat from extremists—both religious and political—and despite the punishing dearth of resources, Syrian civil society continues to provide and protect. Though relatively little is written about it, Syrian civil society is remarkably active.

    June 30, 2015

    The Shi‘a Question in Saudi Arabia
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Shi‘a Question in Saudi Arabia

    Saudi Arabia is a Sunni-majority state and home to a significant Shi‘i minority, most of whom live in the Eastern Province. The Shi‘a there are mainly of the Twelver sect, which is also the major Shi‘i sect in Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, and Bahrain. The Eastern Province Twelvers are not the only Shi‘a in Saudi Arabia—there are sizable communities of Twelvers in Medina and Isma‘ilis in Najran—but it is they who sit at the center of the Shi‘i political movement in the kingdom.

    June 26, 2015