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Fires of Damascus: Protecting Syria’s homes and heritage from the failed and rapacious state
Photo by LOUAI BESHARA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Fires of Damascus: Protecting Syria’s homes and heritage from the failed and rapacious state

    July 16, 2023, was a dark day for the ancient city of Damascus. A fire raged through the historic Sarouja neighborhood, reducing a number of heritage homes to ashes. Two months later, in September 2023, a residential building in the Syrian capital’s Malki neighborhood partially collapsed as a result of unauthorized excavation for a basement. While these events might not seem connected, they underscore an overarching issue: the vulnerability of Damascus properties in the face of natural and man-made crises, exacerbated by corruption, greed, and failed and vicious state policies.

    Human rights to counter terrorism: Now is the time for a Global Humanitarian Coalition to Defeat ISIS
    Photo by DELIL SOULEIMAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Human rights to counter terrorism: Now is the time for a Global Humanitarian Coalition to Defeat ISIS

    There is an urgent need for a Global Humanitarian Coalition to Defeat ISIS to conduct human rights-centered action and build upon hard-fought military gains in the campaign against ISIS. Repatriation of all third-country nationals in the squalid detention camps and prisons in northeast Syria must be the first joint task in order to ease the burden of the local administration and to accomplish long-sought security, justice, and stabilization goals.

    September 26, 2023

    How northern Syria’s triple water crisis is exacerbating its people’s woes
  • Analysis
  • How northern Syria’s triple water crisis is exacerbating its people’s woes

    As the humanitarian, political, and economic challenges in Syria are occurring simultaneously with increasingly hot and dry summers, conflict- and climate-related factors have compounded, resulting in the emergence of a so-called “triple water crisis.”

    September 19, 2023

    Autocracy not reform remains Erdoğan’s recipe for Turkey
  • Commentary
  • Autocracy not reform remains Erdoğan’s recipe for Turkey

    Since Turkey’s presidential election in May, western analysts have held out hope that Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will moderate his strongman style of rule. Feeding their optimism are several steps Erdoğan has taken, including appointing market-friendly technocrats to his economic team, replacing the hardline interior minister, dialling down anti-western rhetoric and voicing support for Sweden’s Nato membership. All these moves, however, are aimed at strengthening Erdoğan’s one-man rule, and the west is helping him. 

    After an uprising and violent crackdown, Syria’s Deir ez-Zor is at a critical juncture
    Photo by DELIL SOULEIMAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • After an uprising and violent crackdown, Syria’s Deir ez-Zor is at a critical juncture

    On Sept. 8, the Kurdish-led SDF, a key U.S. ally, announced the end of its “Operation Security Enhancement” in Deir ez-Zor in northeast Syria. While framed as an operation targeting ISIS sleeper cells and criminals, it aimed at quashing an armed uprising led by Arab tribesmen, particularly members of the Akidat tribe. While multiple factors may have contributed to fueling the uprising, the importance of the region’s longstanding grievances cannot be overstated.

    September 14, 2023

    Deir ez-Zor torn between Arab tribes’ struggle for independence and the SDF’s efforts to subdue them
    Photo by Bekir Kasim/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Deir ez-Zor torn between Arab tribes’ struggle for independence and the SDF’s efforts to subdue them

    On Sept. 8, the Syrian Democratic Forces were able to enter the villages and towns of Deir ez-Zor’s eastern countryside, stretching from al-Tayyanah to al-Baghouz, regaining control of all of the areas that had witnessed an uprising against their forces beginning on Aug. 27. But what sparked the fighting in the first place, how did things play out, and what might it mean for the region going forward?

    صراع ديرالزور بين دفاع العشائر عن الاستقلالية ومخطط "قسد" للإخضاع
    Photo by Bekir Kasim/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • صراع ديرالزور بين دفاع العشائر عن الاستقلالية ومخطط "قسد" للإخضاع

    تمكنت قوات سوريا الديمقراطية في الثامن من أيلول/سبتمبر، من الدخول إلى قرى وبلدات ريف ديرالزور الشرقي الممتد من بلدة الطيانة حتى الباغوز، بذلك أعادة السيطرة على جميع المناطق التي شهدت حالة تمرد ضد قواتها، التي بدأت في السابع والعشرين من شهر آب/ أغسطس الماضي.

    Russia’s aggressive behavior in the Black Sea can be challenged
    Photo courtesy of the author
  • Analysis
  • Russia’s aggressive behavior in the Black Sea can be challenged

    Russia’s malign behavior in the Black Sea includes piracy, plunder, petroleum price cap violations, and actions to prevent the free transit of foreign commercial and naval vessels. Its largely unchallenged position in the Black Sea also helps Russia maintain access to foreign-made products and components, circumventing sanctions. The West and the broader international community have yet to act to decisively rein in these flagrant violations of international laws and norms.

    September 8, 2023

    Deir ez-Zor’s tribes reach a breaking point
    Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Deir ez-Zor’s tribes reach a breaking point

    Years of simmering tensions between the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and local populations in northeast Syria have exploded this week into still-expanding battles across much of Deir ez-Zor. Conflict resolution requires the international coalition to engage with the Kurdish administration on deep political and administrative reforms. However, the violence in Deir ez-Zor may demand a more creative and locally driven approach to the northeast to foster a more resilient governance and security structure.

    September 1, 2023

    Can oil and water mix?: Creating opportunities for Iraq-Turkey cooperation
    Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Can oil and water mix?: Creating opportunities for Iraq-Turkey cooperation

    Last week saw a flurry of diplomatic activity between Baghdad and Ankara. The top priorities in the talks were oil exports, the presence of the PKK in Iraq, and Iraq’s water crisis. The outcomes have been unimpressive, but there is an opportunity for Iraq to shake things up and improve its bargaining position, at least on the oil export issue, possibly more.

    August 31, 2023

    After Prigozhin: The future of Wagner and Russian gray zone activities in MENA
    Contributor/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • After Prigozhin: The future of Wagner and Russian gray zone activities in MENA

    As the Wagner Group has an entrenched military presence in Syria, Libya, and Sudan, the evisceration of its senior leadership will have serious repercussions for Russia’s influence in the MENA region. Wagner’s military contractors are unlikely to depart, since they guard strategically valuable oil and mining facilities; but they are likely to now be swiftly integrated into the regular Russian Armed Forces.

    August 31, 2023

    A dangerous escalation in Syria’s Deir ez-Zor
    Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • A dangerous escalation in Syria’s Deir ez-Zor

    The SDF has always been a diverse coalition of localized actors. Over the past eight years, it has managed to contain these persistent frictions, but that may now be coming to an end. In the past three days, at least 50 people have been killed in fighting between Arab tribal fighters and the SDF in the region where Syria’s Khabur and Euphrates rivers meet. The catalyst for this fighting occurred late on Aug. 27, when Ahmed al-Khubayl, the leader of the SDF’s Deir ez-Zor Military Council, was lured north to Hasakah for a purported meeting, only to be arrested alongside his brother and four other commanders.