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July 4 from abroad: The many ages of America in the Arab world
Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • July 4 from abroad: The many ages of America in the Arab world

    From the past century until today, the U.S. has cast a long shadow in the Middle East region and relations have gone through many highs and lows. It is important to be aware of this trajectory to better understand the relationship today; and perhaps there are lessons to inform the future of the relationship in the coming century.

    July 7, 2023

    Middle East futures will pivot on women
    Photo by Lynsey Addario/Getty Images Reportage
  • Analysis
  • Middle East futures will pivot on women

    Gender parity in the Middle East is still many decades away, but it will largely determine the future of economic, social, cultural, and political development in the region.

    June 28, 2023

    The Taliban’s unsustainable war on drugs
  • Commentary
  • The Taliban’s unsustainable war on drugs

    According to multiple media reports, Taliban anti-narcotics units have managed to effect a drastic reduction in opium cultivation in Afghanistan. Assisted by armed Taliban soldiers, stick-wielding personnel are hopping from one opium-growing field to another, destroying standing crops in a large number of provinces. Overseen by international media, such operations may have resulted in an almost 80 percent reduction in opium cultivation this year in the country, which not long ago accounted for 85 percent of the world’s opium.

    June 27, 2023

    Disease, destruction, flooded fields, and hunger: The far-reaching consequence of the Kakhovka dam collapse in Ukraine
    Photo by Roman Pilipey/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Disease, destruction, flooded fields, and hunger: The far-reaching consequence of the Kakhovka dam collapse in Ukraine

    Last week’s collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam on the Dnipro River in Ukraine is one of the largest environmental disaster the Black Sea region and Europe has faced in decades. Its far-reaching environmental, economic, and humanitarian consequences will affect not just Ukraine and the Black Sea region, but also the Middle East and Africa.

    Defense Rapid Reaction: Proposed reforms to the U.S. Foreign Military Sales process
    Photo by Markus Matzel/ullstein bild via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Defense Rapid Reaction: Proposed reforms to the U.S. Foreign Military Sales process

    In the latest installment of the Defense Rapid Reaction series, experts from MEI’s Defense & Security Program provide their views on what reforms to the U.S. Foreign Military Sales process could or should accomplish and how an improved approach to approving foreign arms sales can strengthen U.S. relations with international partners and allies.

    June 16, 2023

    Pakistan’s establishment closing the curtain on Imran Khan and his party
    Photo by FAROOQ NAEEM/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan’s establishment closing the curtain on Imran Khan and his party

    The likelihood of former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan successfully extricating himself from his entwined battle with the Army now appears to be nearly impossible. He has crossed too many red lines for the military establishment to give him slack. The developing situation ahead of the October elections looks set to culminate with Khan imprisoned and stripped of his political party.

    India-Taliban relations: A careful balancing act, driven by pragmatism
    Photo by Ajay Aggarwal/Hindustan Times via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • India-Taliban relations: A careful balancing act, driven by pragmatism

    An ongoing power struggle for the position of ambassador at the Afghan embassy in New Delhi underlines India’s diplomatic quandary about the nature of its engagement with the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

    May 30, 2023

    International institutions confront Taliban troubles
    Photo by WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • International institutions confront Taliban troubles

    International leaders are struggling to manage a Taliban-ruled Afghanistan; they are torn between their commitment to alleviate Afghans’ suffering and their reluctance to legitimize a Taliban government that violates its people’s basic rights. Helping Afghans but not their new “de facto authorities” is a difficult balance for a diverse group of international actors with often divergent long-term interests.

    May 18, 2023

    Joining the pieces together: Toward a comprehensive EU maritime approach for the Northwestern Indian Ocean, Persian Gulf, and Red Sea
    Photo credit: ROBIN UTRECHT/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Joining the pieces together: Toward a comprehensive EU maritime approach for the Northwestern Indian Ocean, Persian Gulf, and Red Sea

    Until recently, the EU has favored a piecemeal approach toward the Northwestern Indian Ocean, the Gulf, and the Red Sea, despite their close interdependence and inter-connectedness in the security, political, and economic realms. But the EU is now signaling a growing desire to steer its naval policy toward a more holistic and organic process, creating an opportunity for Brussels to become a more relevant security actor in the waters off the Arabian Peninsula.

    May 9, 2023

    The quantum politics of the Middle East
    Photo by JACK GUEZ/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The quantum politics of the Middle East

    Both historical and modern-day conflicts in the Middle East have all been centered around classical territorial considerations of the loss or recovery of land. Escaping that cycle required a shift away from one of the main root causes of conflict: geography. The current changes in the region, characterized by a significant drive toward de-escalation and a growing willingness to periodically part ways with traditional allies, may be telling symptoms of a profound tectonic shift toward “quantum politics.”

    May 1, 2023