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From Gaza Cease-fire to Middle East Peace?
  • Policy Memo
  • From Gaza Cease-fire to Middle East Peace?

    The October 2025 cease-fire and hostage-release deal that ended the Israel-Hamas conflict marks the beginning of a complicated post-war phase. The agreement has created important opportunities to advance stability in the Middle East and build a lasting and sustainable peace marked by enhanced regional security and integration, but there are considerable risks to manage. Achieving these goals will require coordinated international action along multiple lines of effort: security, rule of law, recovery and reconstruction, responsive governance, and steady and focused diplomacy to build confidence among key parties. 

    Has Pakistan agreed to use nuclear force to defend Saudi Arabia?
  • Video
  • Has Pakistan agreed to use nuclear force to defend Saudi Arabia?

    Saudi Arabia and Pakistan signed a mutual defense pact on September 17, 2025, declaring that “any aggression against either country shall be considered an aggression against both.” The wording of the agreement sparked speculation that Pakistan might use its nuclear capabilities to defend Saudi Arabia. MEI’s F. Gregory Gause contends otherwise, offering insight into the history and strategic calculations driving the deal. To learn more about the deal, visit our website.

    Light at the end of the tunnel in the Gaza war? Three questions about Trump’s 20-point plan
    Photo by Kobi Wolf/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Light at the end of the tunnel in the Gaza war? Three questions about Trump’s 20-point plan

    US President Donald Trump sent his top Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and his son-in-law Jared Kushner to take part in Israel-Hamas talks hosted by Egypt this week aimed at ending the war in Gaza, securing the release of hostages, and producing progress toward a lasting and sustainable resolution to the conflict. Here are three things to watch for in US policy on this front in the coming days and weeks.

    Pakistan’s strategic defense pact with Saudi Arabia: A new security architecture in the wider Middle East
    Photo via Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan’s strategic defense pact with Saudi Arabia: A new security architecture in the wider Middle East

    Following Israel’s September 9 strike on Hamas targets in Qatar, Pakistan has taken swift and significant foreign policy steps in response and adopted an unusually assertive stance. This shift was largely influenced by Pakistan’s military chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir. The latter is determined to enhance his country’s strategic autonomy and diplomatic leverage in an increasingly complex international environment by positioning Pakistan as a key security actor and an emerging middle power on the global stage.

    Silent leverage, quiet gains? China and the Saudi-Pakistan defense pact
    Photo by Madoka Ikegami-Pool/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Silent leverage, quiet gains? China and the Saudi-Pakistan defense pact

    The Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement (SMDA) between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, signed in Riyadh on September 17, is far more than a bilateral pledge. It represents a profound reordering of alignments in the Gulf and South Asia, reflecting and reinforcing the broader erosion of US preeminence in the Eurasian security architecture. While much of the initial commentary centered on the striking commitment of a wealthy Gulf monarchy to the defense of a nuclear-armed South Asian state, as well as the question of whether Pakistan had in fact extended its nuclear umbrella to Saudi Arabia, the deeper story is arguably China’s potential advance.

    Don't believe the hype: The modest reality of the Saudi-Pakistani defense pact
    Image created by Oleksii Liskonih via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Don't believe the hype: The modest reality of the Saudi-Pakistani defense pact

    The September 17 Saudi-Pakistani defense agreement generated a wave of overheated commentary about Saudi Arabia now residing under a Pakistani nuclear umbrella and how a new strategic reality was in the offing in the Persian Gulf and South Asian regions. Analysts need to slow their roll. Extended deterrence is an extremely difficult thing to pull off. The devil is in the details, about which we know nothing.

    Peace in the Middle East — or constructive ambiguity in reverse
    Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Peace in the Middle East — or constructive ambiguity in reverse

    After two terrible years — beginning on the horrific morning of October 7, 2023 — there is now a chance the Gaza war could end. This chance exists not because the 20-point proposal released by the United States on September 29, 2025, is a model of diplomatic detail or nuance. It exists because its patron, President Donald Trump, appears determined not to take “no” for an answer.

    Moroccan youth angrily protest government’s failed development promises
    Photo by Abdel Majid Bziouat/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Moroccan youth angrily protest government’s failed development promises

    Hundreds of young Moroccans are protesting across 11 cities since September 27 under the banner “GenZ 212.” The central trigger behind the demonstrations has been a deep popular frustration with Morocco’s persistent inability to deliver on its development plans and promises. This sort of broad disaffection will be challenging for the government to address quickly and credibly.

    A Middle East NATO? Regional Security Options After Doha
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • A Middle East NATO? Regional Security Options After Doha

    Israel’s September 9 strike on Hamas leaders in Doha rattled Gulf capitals and revived a decades-old debate over whether the region needs a NATO-style defensive alliance. MEI Senior Fellow Jason Campbell joins hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj to unpack why past attempts at collective defense have fallen short, whether this moment is different, and what the crisis means for US security strategy in the Middle East.

    September 25, 2025

    Strategic drift in US Middle East policy as Trump speaks on the world stage
    Photo by Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Strategic drift in US Middle East policy as Trump speaks on the world stage

    President Donald Trump used his speech this week before the United Nations General Assembly to reinforce his unique style of US foreign policy-making and levy criticisms against others, including the UN itself. But Trump did little to create a framework for crafting solutions to address problems and thorny security challenges.

    North Africa’s experiment in tactical diplomacy
    Photo by Tunisian Presidency / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • North Africa’s experiment in tactical diplomacy

    North African states are turning long-standing diplomatic relationships into new opportunities for leverage, using migration flows, energy supplies, and security partnerships as bargaining chips. These new tactics and strategies are reshaping regional diplomacy.

    Bent But Not Broken: The Abraham Accords Five Years On
  • Video
  • Bent But Not Broken: The Abraham Accords Five Years On

    On the fifth anniversary of the Abraham Accords, MEI’s Brian Katulis reflects on their durability and future: “These Abraham Accords will not be broken. They’ll be bent, but I think they’ll stay in place. But they won’t expand in any way until there’s progress on the Palestinian question.” He unpacks the origins of the agreements, their strengths and limitations, and the key challenges that must be addressed for them to grow stronger.

    September 15, 2025

    Israel’s Doha strike could further destabilize region, undermine US security partnerships
    Photo by JACQUELINE PENNEY/AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Israel’s Doha strike could further destabilize region, undermine US security partnerships

    The reverberations of Israel’s strike on the Hamas negotiating team in Doha yesterday are still rippling across the globe and will continue to for the foreseeable future. Its ramifications are profound and will alter the geopolitical landscape not just in the Middle East but likely on a global scale.

    Trump desperate for progress in his sound and fury foreign policy
    Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Trump desperate for progress in his sound and fury foreign policy

    The most striking thing about Donald Trump’s foreign policy at the seven-month mark of his second administration is how it has failed to improve America’s overall strategic position in the world. It is still early days, but the Trump team’s frenetic flurry of actions, coupled with attention-seeking and often incendiary rhetoric, has served to obscure a poor record of scoring significant international wins for America.

    UNIFIL should reset or go home
    Photo by Niall Carson/PA Images via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • UNIFIL should reset or go home

    At the end of August, the future of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), established nearly 50 years ago, goes on trial in New York, where the Security Council will debate the renewal of its mandate. Nearly two decades after its transformation under UN Security Council Resolution 1701, UNIFIL is now part of the problem it was created to solve. Ten thousand blue helmets from almost 50 countries, including major North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) members, failed to stop the latest conflict between Israel and Hizballah, and, if business continues as usual, will fail to prevent the next.