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Rethinking US Counterterrorism Strategy
Photo by John Moore/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Rethinking US Counterterrorism Strategy

    Today’s landscape is dramatically different from that to which we awoke on Sept. 11, 2001. It’s a complex mix of foreign and domestic forces influenced by economic and social conditions that breed extremism which ebbs and flows across physical and cyber space often defined by great power competition. While terrorist groups like al-Qaeda and ISIS have innovated and adapted, U.S. counterterrorism strategy has remained unchanged, fighting yesterday’s war while neglecting present day threats as well as those over the near horizon. America is long overdue to update its counterterrorism strategy and, perhaps more importantly, how we measure success.

    July 6, 2020

    Deradicalization Programs for SOSMA, POTA, and POCA Detainees in Malaysia
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Deradicalization Programs for SOSMA, POTA, and POCA Detainees in Malaysia

    Counterterrorism strategies can be made more effective by incorporating deradicalization and rehabilitation measures. Deradicalization is a key element of Malaysia’s counterterrorism and violent extremism strategy. This article discusses the Malaysian Government’s multi-stage deradicalization process.

    June 23, 2020

    Shocks and Rivalries in the Middle East and North Africa
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Shocks and Rivalries in the Middle East and North Africa

    MEI Non-Resident Scholar Imad Mansour and William Thompson, Professor of Political Science Emeritus at Indiana University, join host Alistair Taylor to talk about their new book, “Shocks and Rivalries in the Middle East and North Africa” (Georgetown University Press), and discuss the network of rivalries, conflict dynamics, and conflict de-escalation in the MENA region.

    June 18, 2020

    Are the foreign patrons of the Libyan war ready to end it?
    Photo by Amru Salahuddien/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Are the foreign patrons of the Libyan war ready to end it?

    Absent major military escalation by his foreign patrons, Khalifa Hifter has now lost the war he initiated against Libya’s internationally recognized government in Tripoli. The question remains, however, of how to end Libya’s proxy war and restart the necessary political process to bring about sustained peace.

    Returning Foreign Fighters: Is Malaysia Ready?
    MOHD RASFAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Returning Foreign Fighters: Is Malaysia Ready?

    It has been more than a year since the fall of Baghouz. Eleven Malaysians have returned from Syria under the Malaysian government’s offer, conditional upon compliance with checks and enforcement, and a one-month rehabilitation program. Since then, the authorities are optimistic that more will be able to return. However, the anticipation of more returnees raises questions about Malaysia’s readiness to receive incoming batches of Malaysia Islamic State (IS) fighters. Given Malaysia’s lack of experience dealing with battle-hardened terrorists and questions about the efficacy of existing deradicalization efforts, can these structures tackle issues that Malaysia has never faced?

    May 26, 2020

    Rival Afghan leaders strike a power-sharing deal, but there are plenty of other obstacles on the road to peace
    Photo by JIM BOURG/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Rival Afghan leaders strike a power-sharing deal, but there are plenty of other obstacles on the road to peace

    There was no other way to end the political logjam in conflict-ridden Afghanistan than to make current President Ashraf Ghani and the outgoing Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah agree to share power. The deal announced on May 17 has been widely welcomed by the international community because the political tensions between the two rivals were viewed as one of the major hurdles to the advancement of an intra-Afghan reconciliation process. The political jockeying in Kabul is far from the only impediment to reconciliation though and there are deeper obstacles to the peace process.

    May 20, 2020

    It’s not about Assad
    (Photo by ALEXEY NIKOLSKY/SPUTNIK/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • It’s not about Assad

    Saying that Moscow is having a change of heart at this very moment, let alone is willing to publicly broadcast this to Damascus, may be a bit premature.

    May 11, 2020

    Is Idlib set for internal strife?
    Photo by OMAR HAJ KADOUR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Is Idlib set for internal strife?

    With its territory under increasing pressure, its finances dwindling, and manpower more challenged than ever, HTS’s ability to balance its extremism with controlled uses of pragmatism is under strain. Internally, its leadership is bitterly divided over decisions of the past, present, and future and externally, its rivals and enemies all appear to be conspiring against it. In an attempt to protect internal cohesion, HTS has become determinedly self-assertive in recent weeks, pursuing unpopular policies such as trading with the regime and lashing out at those brave enough to express their dissatisfaction. In response to HTS aggressions, a wider array of opposition voices — both moderate and Islamist — are declaring loudly that HTS now represents a threat to their revolution.

    The growing threat of ISIS in Syria’s Badia
    Photo by: GEORGE OURFALIAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The growing threat of ISIS in Syria’s Badia

    When the American-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) captured the village of al-Baghouz in late
    March 2019, ISIS’s self-proclaimed “caliphate” came to an end. The largest multinational military
    coalition in modern history spent four-and-a-half years methodically rolling back ISIS’s control of an
    expanse of territory the size of Britain, stretching across Syria and Iraq.

    “A Force They Haven’t Seen Before”: Insurgent ISIS in Central Syria
    Photo by STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • “A Force They Haven’t Seen Before”: Insurgent ISIS in Central Syria

    Immediately after the Syrian regime and its allies captured central Syria in late 2017, ISIS began waging an effective and deadly insurgency in the area. It first targeted urban centers along the western Euphrates before shifting focus in spring 2018 to the transport lines and mountains running along the M20 from Khunayfis to Shoula. These wide-ranging operations have killed a minimum of 860 pro-regime fighters of all ranks, units, and types. This report tracks self-reported regime losses in the region, as indicated on loyalist Facebook pages, community pages, and unit pages, from Nov. 10, 2017 through March 31, 2020.

    April 15, 2020

    The Forgotten Iraq
     Iraqi civilians, who fled from Daesh controlled Hawija district of Kirkuk, are seen at Daqouq tent city southern Kirkuk, Iraq on November 12, 2017. (Photo by Ali Mukarrem Garip/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • The Forgotten Iraq

    The story from Iraq since last October has been mainly one of uplifting hope, as mass protests sweep across the country in a fight against corruption, nepotism, and bad governance. But what of the places left behind and ignored? For most of its modern history, Iraq has been embroiled in sectarianism and conflict, most recently with the rise of ISIS. The country has celebrated its ability to fight ISIS and take back the areas the group controlled between 2013 and 2017, but for those that remain in the most vulnerable liberated areas, life is precarious and dangerous, with underserviced communities living in the most dire of conditions.

    March 16, 2020

    Missing the long game: Washington’s high-risk energy diplomacy in Iraq
    An employee walks at the Hammar Mushrif new Degassing Station Facilities site inside the Zubair oil and gas field, north of the southern Iraqi province of Basra on May 9, 2018. (Photo by HAIDAR MOHAMMED ALI / AFP) (Photo credit should read HAIDAR MOHAMMED ALI/AFP via Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • Missing the long game: Washington’s high-risk energy diplomacy in Iraq

    Washington’s foreign relations in the Middle East are often characterized by ebb and flow, tracking the region’s dynamic politics. But when it comes to Iraq, this ebb and flow is especially turbulent, and the country’s energy sector has been thrown under the spotlight as Washington presses Baghdad to take swift action to ensure its “energy independence” from Iran.

    March 13, 2020