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Alawites in Syria breaking silence?: Criticizing the dictatorship from within
From social media
  • Commentary
  • Alawites in Syria breaking silence?: Criticizing the dictatorship from within

    Recently, a notable trend has emerged among Alawites in Syria’s Assad regime-held areas, including those from powerful families. Writers, journalists, and rank-and-file Alawites have taken to social media platforms to express their deep frustration with the regime’s economic policies and the centralized nature of the dictatorship under President Bashar al-Assad, as well as his wife Asma al-Assad’s outsized influence and corruption linked to her secretive “economic council.”

    August 11, 2023

    Five factors to watch in US diplomatic efforts on a possible Israel-Saudi deal
    Photo by AMER HILABI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Five factors to watch in US diplomatic efforts on a possible Israel-Saudi deal

    Forging a deal establishing open, normal bilateral ties between Saudi Arabia and Israel would be a major feat with plenty of potential perils along the way — the diplomatic equivalent of climbing Mount Everest. If done right, the result would be historic and transformative for the Middle East with positive geopolitical repercussions. Here are five factors to watch as the Biden administration continues its efforts to produce a major diplomatic breakthrough in the region.

    Japan looks to the Gulf as it bets big on hydrogen
    Photo by Akio Kon/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Japan looks to the Gulf as it bets big on hydrogen

    As a trailblazer in hydrogen diplomacy, Japan is seeking to develop a new pattern of energy interdependence with its longstanding partners, the Gulf Arab states — countries that are promising production bases for and exporters of green hydrogen and ammonia, and whose leaders have come to regard the development of clean hydrogen as an attractive way to diversify their economies.

    A defense treaty is not how Biden should fix the Saudi relationship
  • Commentary
  • A defense treaty is not how Biden should fix the Saudi relationship

    The United States has likely reached a crossroads in its relationship with Saudi Arabia. President Joe Biden can reconcile with Riyadh and use its influence to reshape the Middle East to Washington’s liking and stabilize the global energy markets. Or else the Saudis most probably will tie their fortunes much closer to China, thus complicating America’s top foreign-policy priority.

    August 1, 2023

    Normalizing Assad has made Syria’s problems even worse
  • Commentary
  • Normalizing Assad has made Syria’s problems even worse

    Three months ago, Saudi Arabia kick-started a concerted regional effort to reengage and normalize Syria’s regime within the Middle East and, Riyadh hoped, farther afield. On April 18, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan met with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian capital of Damascus. Just one month later, on May 19, the Arab League embraced one of the world’s most notorious war criminals for the first time since 2011.

    Why it’s time to repatriate IS foreign fighters
    Photo by FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Why it’s time to repatriate IS foreign fighters

    As the clock ticks down on the repatriation of IS foreign fighters from Syria, a recent development has added a new sense of urgency to the situation. On June 11, the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES), announced its intention to prosecute 2,000 IS foreign fighters. How-ever, the lack of international recognition for the AANES and its courts renders these trials illegiti-mate, further complicating future international legal efforts to prosecute these combatants.

    July 26, 2023

    Changing dynamics reshape power networks in Yemen’s “two Hadramawts”
    Photo by KARIM SAHIB/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Changing dynamics reshape power networks in Yemen’s “two Hadramawts”

    Since 2015, Yemen’s largest governorate, Hadramawt, has been informally divided between two distinct centers of power with different military loyalties and external backing. The balance of power within the governorate is no longer fixed, however. Changes in Hadramawt’s military, political, and economic dynamics are reshaping power networks in the governorate and beyond, with implications for the conflicting agendas of the Saudis, Emiratis, and Houthis.

    July 24, 2023

    The new wave of dealmaking by Gulf sovereign wealth funds
    Photo by FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The new wave of dealmaking by Gulf sovereign wealth funds

    For resource-rich countries such as Gulf oil and natural gas producers, sovereign wealth funds have emerged as promising tools to save for future generations, mitigate the effects of outsized economic shocks, and/or be deployed as reserve investment and strategic development funds to spend on human, natural, social, and physical capital.

    سورية التي أسست للخلاف بين قوات فاغنر والحكومة الروسية
    Photo by STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • سورية التي أسست للخلاف بين قوات فاغنر والحكومة الروسية

    لم يكن تمرد مجموعات فاغنر العسكرية على الحكومة الروسية ووزارة الدفاع وقادتها العسكريين مفاجئاً، خاصة في الفترة الأخيرة من الحرب الروسية الأوكرانية مع الظهور المستمر لزعيم تلك القوات يفغيني بريغوجين، الذي تكرر ظهوره خلال الأشهر الماضية منتفداً تارة ومهدداً تارةً أخرى للقادة العسكريين الروس، بسبب ما قال إنه نقص في الذخيرة والمعدات المقدمة لقواته على جبهات أوكرانية وخاصة باخموت، ما تسبب بمقتل العشرات من قواته على مدار الفترة الماضية.

    Syria is where the conflict between Wagner and the Russian government began
    Photo by STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Syria is where the conflict between Wagner and the Russian government began

    The conflict between the Wagner Group and the Russian government was not born out of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, though the war there caused the rift to widen and tensions to explode publicly in the form of an armed rebellion. Instead, the discord actually started in Syria back in 2017 and has intensified since then.

    What Syrian civil society should do next
    Photo courtesy Lars Hauch
  • Analysis
  • What Syrian civil society should do next

    Following two years of preparation, the Syrian Madaniya (“Civil”) initiative held its inaugural conference with over 180 participating organizations. To claim a political role, Madaniya needs a program and a partner. The natural partner for this endeavor is the Syrian Negotiation Commission.

    July 12, 2023