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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.

    Trump’s unpredictable diplomacy of distraction mostly comes up empty
    Photo by Chen Mengtong/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Trump’s unpredictable diplomacy of distraction mostly comes up empty

    All eyes this week are on Alaska, where US President Donald Trump will hold a pivotal meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss ending the Ukraine war. But the United States remains consumed by several domestic issues, including continued strains over policing, immigration, and checks and balances inside America’s system of government. All of this comes at a time when Trump’s domestic political standing continues to slip lower, including among members of his own party.

    Gulf Arabs fear Israel is becoming Goliath
    Photo by Abir Sultan/Pool/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Gulf Arabs fear Israel is becoming Goliath

    As the Trump administration pushes to expand the Abraham Accords in the Middle East and into the Caucasus and Central Asia, it overlooks a dramatic shift in perception across the Arab and Muslim world. Where once Israel might have been viewed as David battling a Goliath-like Arab world, today the roles appear reversed. Israel, empowered by unchecked military might and unwavering US support, is increasingly seen not just as a regional power but as a US-backed regional hegemon. For Gulf Arab states, this transformation presents a dilemma: Can a Goliath be a partner in peace?

    Lebanon and the UNIFIL Mandate: Disarming Hizballah and Reclaiming Sovereignty
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Lebanon and the UNIFIL Mandate: Disarming Hizballah and Reclaiming Sovereignty

    With its new government at the half-year mark and the UNIFIL international peacekeeping force’s mandate due for reauthorization at month’s end, Lebanon stands at a pivotal moment. In this episode of Middle East Focus, hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj are joined by MEI Senior Fellow Fadi Nicholas Nassar to evaluate whether the Lebanese state can reclaim its sovereignty, starting with the disarmament of Hizballah and the enforcement of a cease-fire.

    August 7, 2025

    Post-Oct. 7 divergent paths: Israel’s military maximalism and Saudi Arabia’s strategic de-escalation
    Photo by Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Post-Oct. 7 divergent paths: Israel’s military maximalism and Saudi Arabia’s strategic de-escalation

    The Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023, shattered Israel’s long-standing security paradigm, replacing limited deterrence with an ambitious campaign aimed at dismantling Hamas, confronting Hizballah and other Iranian proxies, and directly targeting Iran’s nuclear program with the support of the United States. In stark contrast, Saudi Arabia has prioritized regional stability and de-escalation, restoring relations with Iran, and focusing on its Vision 2030 economic transformation.

    The Gulf states in a fluid post-war Middle East
    Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Gulf states in a fluid post-war Middle East

    The monarchical Arab Gulf states emerged on the other side of last June’s Israeli and US attacks on Iran largely unscathed, with the important exception of a limited, retaliatory Iranian missile strike on the American airbase in Qatar. However, in a larger sense, this short war, part of the broader regional conflict that began with the Hamas attack on Israel in October 2023, reinforced the precariousness of the Gulf monarchies’ security situation.

    The current Israeli-Palestinian nightmare is a result of multiple failures of leadership
    Photo by Bashar Taleb/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The current Israeli-Palestinian nightmare is a result of multiple failures of leadership

    The unresolved crises unfolding on the Israeli-Palestinian front — a growing humanitarian disaster inside of Gaza, the horrific images of emaciated Israelis held hostage by terrorists in the coastal strip, and ongoing tensions in Jerusalem and the West Bank fueled by religious extremists of all stripes — represent one of the biggest strategic challenges to stability facing the Middle East. With Israel now openly contemplating a full occupation of Gaza, this set of issues serves as an obstacle to broader regional peace and normalization efforts.

    One year of Pezeshkian: The scapegoat-in-waiting
    Photo by Raheb Homavandi/AFP Via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • One year of Pezeshkian: The scapegoat-in-waiting

    President Masoud Pezeshkian’s first year in office has been defined by Iran’s familiar political structural constraints, external crises, and a moderate-reformist base forever frustrated with his cautious pragmatism and unfulfilled promises. His July 2024 election was undeniably a setback for hardliners. Yet one year later, the assessment is sobering: While Pezeshkian has in some ways perhaps helped in slowing the hardline march, he has not made any fundamental difference in how the Islamic Republic is run. Every decision requires second-guessing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s next move, and even as a president boxed in by the system with limited powers, he is constantly under the sword of Damocles.

    US Policy in the Middle East: Second Quarter 2025 Report Card
    Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
  • Report
  • US Policy in the Middle East: Second Quarter 2025 Report Card

    Six months into his second term, President Donald Trump remains in search of a major, concrete foreign policy win. Trump 2.0’s foreign policy is still struggling to produce a major positive outcome from its frenetic activity trying to end kinetic wars while prosecuting an unprecedented economic war with much of the rest of the world. The whirlwind of uncertainty since Trump returned to office in January has yet to improve America’s overall strategic position in the world. The following report assesses the US government’s actions over the past three months from May to mid-July 2025.

    Egypt and Gaza: Conflict, Crisis, and the Path to a Ceasefire
  • Podcast
  • Egypt and Gaza: Conflict, Crisis, and the Path to a Ceasefire

    With the dire humanitarian crisis in Gaza in the global spotlight, Egypt faces mounting pressure both at home and abroad. In this episode of Middle East Focus, hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj speak with MEI Senior Fellow Mirette Mabrouk about how Cairo is handling the crisis in the neighboring coastal strip. What are the Egyptian government’s main concerns as conditions there continue to deteriorate? How is Egypt responding to domestic outrage and changing international dynamics?

    July 31, 2025

    2025 Summer Reading List
    Photo by Pedro Fleitas on Unsplash
  • Commentary
  • 2025 Summer Reading List

    As the dog days of August approach, we are pleased to share a curated summer reading list featuring some of VP for Policy Ken Pollack’s favorite books on the region. Covering a variety of timely and engaging topics, the list offers recommendations for anyone interested in deepening their understanding of the Middle East.

    Inflection point or continuing spiral in the Middle East?
    Photo by Mohammed Huwais/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Inflection point or continuing spiral in the Middle East?

    After almost two years of fighting in Gaza, and after the decimation of Hizballah, the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria, and the 12-day Israeli-American war on Iran, the Middle East is in new strategic and political territory. Two pathways lie ahead: the first is one in which the gains and changes brought about by war are turned, through intense diplomacy and negotiation, into new international and political arrangements that bring about a period of security and stability in the region; the second is one in which that corner is not turned, and the wars in Gaza, Iran, and potentially Yemen, Syria, and Lebanon, continue indefinitely. The trajectory will depend on the choices of key actors — above all Iran, Israel, and the United States.

    July 28, 2025

    MENA Energy Recap, Q2-2025: Markets Soften, Resolve Hardens, Investments Grow
    Photo by He Canling/Xinhua via Getty images
  • Report
  • MENA Energy Recap, Q2-2025: Markets Soften, Resolve Hardens, Investments Grow

    The MENA Energy Recap is a quarterly review of key energy developments that took place in the region from April through June of 2025 and what they signal in the months ahead. The Recap views these developments through the lens of policy and strategy, energy security, and markets.