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Fate of the Dragon in the Year of the Red Fire Monkey: China and the Middle East 2016
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Fate of the Dragon in the Year of the Red Fire Monkey: China and the Middle East 2016

    February 2016 marks the beginning of a new phase in the Chinese lunar calendar, drawing to a close a year marked by heightened risks and fortuitous gains in China’s efforts to secure its interests in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. This essay addresses three questions: How well has China adapted to the conflict and instability that have swept the region? And as we enter the Year of the Red Fire Monkey, what are the concerns that are likely to preoccupy Chinese leaders? What, if any, policy adjustments by Beijing, can realistically be expected in light of the current circumstances and uncertain prospects for the region and for China itself?

    Geneva Talks Format Should be an Inclusive Roundtable
  • Analysis
  • Geneva Talks Format Should be an Inclusive Roundtable

    That the Syrian opposition took weeks to agree on a representative delegation hits at an essential problem with the Geneva process: its format. The Russian, American and U.N. architects of the process have retained a regime/opposition binary model that is no longer reflective of the multi-player conflict on the ground.

    February 3, 2016

    Outside Views on the U.S. Strategy for Iraq and Syria and the Evolution of Islamic Extremism
  • Analysis
  • Outside Views on the U.S. Strategy for Iraq and Syria and the Evolution of Islamic Extremism

    Amb. Robert Ford delivered the following prepared remarks at a hearing of the U.S. House Armed Services Committee on January 12, 2016. Click here to watch C-SPAN’s coverage of the hearing.

    Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee,

    It is an honor to be on this distinguished panel.  Thank you for inviting me.

    Russia’s Military Campaign in Syria Contradicts Push for Geneva Compromise
  • Analysis
  • Russia’s Military Campaign in Syria Contradicts Push for Geneva Compromise

    On the eve of the third round of Syrian peace talks, it is becoming clear that the political track is far removed from the military trajectories on the ground. While diplomats scurry to draw up agendas for Geneva III, and opposition delegates argue over representation, the war in Syria continues on its own course seemingly oblivious to the murmurs around it.

    January 28, 2016

    Gulf Decisionmakers' Perceptions of Security Ties with China
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Gulf Decisionmakers' Perceptions of Security Ties with China

    The essays featured here are the products of a workshop series analyzing China’s position in the context of Gulf security, organized by the Department of International Affairs and the Center for Humanities and Social Sciences of Qatar University under the direction of Dr. Imad Mansour.  

    January 28, 2016

    Sectarian Divide and Rule in Bahrain: A Self-Fulfilling Prophecy?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Sectarian Divide and Rule in Bahrain: A Self-Fulfilling Prophecy?

    This essay reveals how decades of sectarian government policy, including divide and rule tactics and discrimination against Bahraini Shiʿa in the workforce and provision of government services, have strengthened sectarian affiliations at the expense of the more inclusive narrative of Bahraini nationalism.

    January 19, 2016

    Shoot Film, Not Bullets: Yemenis Turn to Art to Cope with Conflict
  • Analysis
  • Shoot Film, Not Bullets: Yemenis Turn to Art to Cope with Conflict

    Yemen’s war is a forgotten catastrophe. Peter Maurer, the president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, stated in August: “Yemen after five months looks like Syria after five years.” All too commonly, civilians are bearing the brunt of the violence in Yemen. According to the United Nations, more than 2,700 people have been killed and more than 5,000 wounded. Schools, hospitals, and roads have been destroyed by the Saudi-led air campaign.

    January 15, 2016

    Has Jordan Acquiesced to Assad Regime Offensive in Southern Syria?
  • Analysis
  • Has Jordan Acquiesced to Assad Regime Offensive in Southern Syria?

    Jordan is yet to react publicly to a fresh land assault by Syrian regime forces, backed by Hezbollah and Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps fighters, against rebel-held towns in southern Syria.

    January 12, 2016

    Saudi-Iran Tensions Place Pressure on Smaller GCC States
  • Analysis
  • Saudi-Iran Tensions Place Pressure on Smaller GCC States

    The recent escalation in tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran is throwing the GCC into a crisis of unity. Riyadh’s actions in particular are built on the frustration of the Yemen war and the perception of Iranian encroachment in Arab lands that the Saudi kingdom believes is its domain. King Salman and his son, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, feel the kingdom is being ignored by the international community in other hot zones, namely Syria, where the outcome of the war is being determined by Washington and Moscow.

    January 11, 2016

    Economic Integration Can Ease Regional Tensions
  • Analysis
  • Economic Integration Can Ease Regional Tensions

    The New Year has seen relations in the region spiral out of control with Saudi Arabia cutting off diplomatic ties with the Islamic Republic of Iran. Sectarian tensions mounted following the execution of prominent Saudi Shi’a cleric Nimr al-Nimr and the subsequent attack on the Saudi embassy in Tehran. The immediate impacts of this escalation will likely be felt in Yemen, with the latest ceasefire collapsing over the New Year, and in Syria where U.N.-sponsored peace talks are set to begin later this month.

    January 8, 2016

    On Syrian Talks and Ceasefires: An Open Letter to Secretary Kerry
  • Analysis
  • On Syrian Talks and Ceasefires: An Open Letter to Secretary Kerry

    Mr. Secretary,

    No one has worked harder than you to find a way to bring all sides together to stop the Syrian civil war and muster more international action against the Islamic State. But as a former colleague, let me caution that without some major adjustments in its approach to the Syrian peace talks in Vienna, the Obama administration is headed down another dead end.

    The Ceasefire Challenge

    Dealing with Daesh: Stay the Course
  • Analysis
  • Dealing with Daesh: Stay the Course

    This article was first published in The Hoover Institution’s The Caravan.

    Daesh or ISIS does not represent an existential threat to any state except Syria and Iraq.  It occupies and controls ungoverned space in the region between Iraq and Syria and in parts of northern Africa; and its self-proclaimed Caliphate has benefited from the seizure of some income producing assets in these areas.  Daesh depends on the dynamism of success and expansion, both of which have been in short supply of late.

    December 4, 2015

    Charting a Course for Syria after Paris and Vienna
  • Analysis
  • Charting a Course for Syria after Paris and Vienna

    The shooting down of a Russian SU-24 by Turkey on November 24 has ratcheted the Syrian crisis to a new level of urgency.  This escalation, combined with the horrific attacks in Paris and the security situation still unfolding across Europe, is understandably dominating the news cycle.  Amidst this tumult, however, the results of the Vienna Summit of November 14 have been largely buried.  In truth, the downing of the Russian fighter and the massacre in Paris underscore the importance of looking again at what came out of the Vienna talks and what steps the U.S.