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Youth dynamics and Iraq’s energy future
Photo by ASAAD NIAZI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Youth dynamics and Iraq’s energy future

    The next few decades will be crucial for Iraq and the KRG as global changes reshape the energy sector. The push for sustainable development, the Paris Agreement climate goals, and associated efforts in areas like renewable energy, climate change, and environmental protection will bring about a transition across the sector, affecting everything from employment and working patterns to governance.

    March 9, 2023

    Russia's Influence in MENA After a Year of War in Ukraine
  • Podcast
  • Russia's Influence in MENA After a Year of War in Ukraine

    MEI Managing Editor Matthew Czekaj speaks with scholars Iulia-Sabina Joja, Alex Vatanka, Yörük Işık, Charles Lister, and Roger Kangas on Russia’s current standing in the Middle East a year since re-invading Ukraine. 

    How has Russian aggression in Ukraine redrawn Moscow’s relationships in the MENA region? And as the Middle East increasingly becomes a key area of global great power competition, is Russia still a meaningful player there, politically, economically, militarily, and diplomatically?

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    February 24, 2023

    Challenges of mechanized and combined arms warfare: Lessons for Ukraine from Syria and Iraq
    RAMZI HAIDAR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Challenges of mechanized and combined arms warfare: Lessons for Ukraine from Syria and Iraq

    The difficulty of quickly providing mechanized and armored equipment to Ukraine, training Ukraine to employ this equipment in combined arms operations, and ensuring Ukraine can maintain and sustain combat power should not be underestimated. As the examples of Turkey’s 2016 military operation in Syria and the U.S. operation in Fallujah in 2004 illustrate, dislodging Russia from its prepared defensive positions will be a daunting task for the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

    February 22, 2023

    “Idlib is under siege”
    Photo courtesy of the author.
  • Commentary
  • “Idlib is under siege”

    “Idlib is under siege” — this is the common sentiment shared with me by both local leaders and residents alike. The dual earthquakes on Feb. 6 not only rocked the physical foundations of the cities in Syria’s last opposition-held region, it cracked the social foundation of trust Syrians had with the international aid community.

    February 22, 2023

    Iraq needs renewables, but they won’t solve its power problems without broader reforms
    Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iraq needs renewables, but they won’t solve its power problems without broader reforms

    Despite massive hydrocarbon reserves, Iraq struggles with chronic electricity shortages. There is a clear need to explore cleaner alternatives, such as renewable energy systems, yet the deployment and integration of these systems would be hindered by the same structural woes that have crippled the electricity sector, and which go far beyond generation issues.

    February 21, 2023

    “Please send tents and blankets”: A desperate plea from Syria’s survivors
    Cover photo: A man watches on as a family sifts through their destroyed home looking for blankets and clothes. Photo by Gregory Waters.
  • Commentary
  • “Please send tents and blankets”: A desperate plea from Syria’s survivors

    In the center of Harem, Idlib, hundreds of Syrian families huddle around stoves and in tents as they look on at the row of collapsed apartments they used to call home. “This disaster hasn’t happened to Syria in a thousand years,” says Abu Ahmed, the director of the new camp. “The international community must witness what is happening to us and help.”

    February 12, 2023

    Earthquake devastates southern Turkey, brings calamity to war-torn Syria
    Photo by Zana Halil/ dia images via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Earthquake devastates southern Turkey, brings calamity to war-torn Syria

    Southern Turkey and northern Syria were struck by a crippling 7.8 magnitude earthquake at 4:17 AM, on Feb. 6. Twelve hours later, at least 2,400 people are known to have perished, with death tolls rapidly rising. This natural disaster could not have come at a worse time or struck a more vulnerable region — with notoriously poor construction in southern Turkey and the effects of more than a decade of brutal conflict still afflicting northern Syria.

    Something has to give in postwar Syria
  • Commentary
  • Something has to give in postwar Syria

    Syria’s crisis is set to enter its 13th year in March. Although the level of violence across the country remains relatively low today compared with earlier years, the crisis is a long, long way from over. Within Syria, at least six distinct conflicts involving internal actors and foreign governments are ongoing to this day, and all of them show more signs of escalating than calming down.

    Taking stock of the first 100 days of Iraq’s new government
    Photo by Bernd von Jutrczenka/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Taking stock of the first 100 days of Iraq’s new government

    In its first 100 days in office, the government of Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed al-Sudani has already left warning signs about what might lie ahead for the country. Although it is still in its early days, government actions have largely strayed from the promises Sudani made before taking office and resulted in setbacks on several fronts.

    January 31, 2023

    Kurdistan gas and diversification
    Photo by Reza/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Kurdistan gas and diversification

    The issue of diversification is difficult but urgent, given increasingly tight global climate policies, the advances of non-fossil technologies, and the limited lifespan of the KRI’s oil resources. Harnessing the region’s natural gas productively is the first step to a cleaner and more diversified economy.

    January 20, 2023