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Egypt and Saudi Arabia: Any good relationship needs work
Photo by USGS/NASA Landsat/Orbital Horizon/Gallo Images/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Egypt and Saudi Arabia: Any good relationship needs work

    Egypt and Saudi Arabia share many foreign policy and regional security objectives and have a long and complicated relationship. Recent events in the Middle East have strengthened that relationship, even as they continue to negotiate difficult bilateral issues, like the long-running dispute over control of the islands of Tiran and Sanafir.

    The ripple effects of US foreign aid cuts to food and water access across North Africa
    Photo by John Falchetto/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The ripple effects of US foreign aid cuts to food and water access across North Africa

    When Executive Order (EO) 14169, “Reevaluating and Realigning United States Foreign Aid,” was issued and implemented by the administration of President Donald Trump in early 2025, it effectively halted nearly all US foreign aid. The order primarily suspended the disbursement of non-military aid programs, leading to the termination of US-funded assistance projects, contracts, and employment across the world. The impact of this abrupt elimination of foreign aid was especially acute for humanitarian and development programs, crippling those targeting food assistance, clean water access, public health, and agricultural support.

    June 12, 2025

    Managing Threats to Food Security: Water and Agricultural Resilience in North Africa
    Photo by Fadel Senna/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Managing Threats to Food Security: Water and Agricultural Resilience in North Africa

    Sustaining food security in North Africa is a complex and evolving challenge, influenced by the region’s arid climate, limited water resources, and sparse arable land. In response, efforts to enhance food security by governments, farmers, and non-governmental organizations have been centered on adopting climate-resilient agricultural practices, efficient irrigation techniques, and sustainable land-management strategies. Despite these efforts, food security in North Africa remains fragile due to systemic pressures on agricultural systems from climate change, water scarcity, and increasing market demands.

    May 27, 2025

    Two Years of War in Sudan and the Elusive Path to Peace
  • Podcast
  • Two Years of War in Sudan and the Elusive Path to Peace

    As Sudan’s civil war enters its third year, the humanitarian catastrophe continues to spiral, with more than 12.7 million people displaced and little hope of resolution in sight.

    Jehanne Henry, MEI Associate Fellow and former Africa Director at Human Rights Watch, joins hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj to assess the latest developments on the ground. She outlines the scale of devastation, the regional spillover effects, and the war economy fueling the fighting.

    April 17, 2025

    The impact of climate variability on Morocco’s agriculture
    Photo by FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The impact of climate variability on Morocco’s agriculture

    Climate variability is becoming a key factor in shaping economic stability, agricultural productivity, and water security worldwide. Periods of prolonged drought and sudden shifts in precipitation can have far-reaching consequences, particularly for countries that rely heavily on natural water sources for farming and economic growth. As weather patterns become increasingly unpredictable, there is a need to navigate both the immediate impacts of climate change and the long-term strategies needed for climate resilience. Finding the right balance between short-term relief and sustainable adaptation is a fundamental challenge for economies dependent on agriculture and water availability. Nowhere is this more evident than in Morocco.

    April 8, 2025

    Pressuring Egypt over Gaza will not work and is not in the US interest
    Photo by Ahmad Salem/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pressuring Egypt over Gaza will not work and is not in the US interest

    Almost immediately after the start of the conflict in Gaza, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his governing coalition began a concerted effort to persuade first the European Union and then the United States to pressure Egypt to accept Palestinian refugees. Egypt refused and continues to do so. Capitulating is not in Cairo’s national interest and bullying it will only backfire.

    A nuclear Middle East is not a secure Middle East
    Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • A nuclear Middle East is not a secure Middle East

    Iran is accumulating enough near-weapons-grade enriched uranium to build a nuclear weapon within weeks or months, not years. President Donald Trump, having withdrawn the United States in 2018 from the nuclear deal that would have postponed that possibility, is now appealing for negotiations with Tehran. But in the Middle East, the nuclear question does not concern only Iran.

    March 25, 2025

    Sovereignty first: Reshaping international cooperation in North Africa
    Photo by UAE Presidential Court / Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Sovereignty first: Reshaping international cooperation in North Africa

    Countries in North Africa and around the world are increasingly prioritizing a strict definition of sovereignty and tending toward transactional diplomacy. Understanding the motivations behind North Africa’s “sovereignty-first” approach can help the United States and Europe build mutually beneficial and durable links with the region in this new reality.

    Illegal arrest and detention of Libyan Asset Recovery head reflects worsening Libyan corruption
    Photo by AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Illegal arrest and detention of Libyan Asset Recovery head reflects worsening Libyan corruption

    Endemic corruption in Libya continues to deter foreign investment, cripple public services, and erode trust in government. This dismal situation is driven by the ongoing power struggles among Libya’s political and military elite. Recently, bad actors in both Libya’s east and west have undertaken a spree of arbitrary arrests and detentions that the United Nations Support Mission in Libya has now warned are not only illegal, but creating “a climate of fear.”

    Rebalancing Russia’s Mediterranean strategy: From showing the flag to retreating to the gray zone
    Photo by Izzettin Kasim/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Rebalancing Russia’s Mediterranean strategy: From showing the flag to retreating to the gray zone

    Either maintaining Russia’s military bases in Syria or finding an alternative outpost in the Mediterranean will prove extremely difficult for Moscow. And part of the problem with pursuing the latter option, particularly if in Libya, is that it would require a full-on transformation of Russia’s military presence model — from more traditional bases designed to establish deterrence by showing the flag in the region to building up a military and logistical operation inside a security “gray zone.”

    Reflections on the UN Summit of the Future
    Photo courtesy of Steven Kenney
  • Commentary
  • Reflections on the UN Summit of the Future

    At last month’s Summit of the Future, the more than 190 UN member countries agreed to unprecedented new commitments on behalf of future generations, and they pledged to build a long-term future perspective into their mechanisms of governance, domestically and multilaterally. MEI’s Strategic Foresight Initiative program director Steven Kenney reflects on attending the summit and its outcomes.

    October 22, 2024