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لا، القبة الحديدية لا تحمي أرواح الفلسطينيين
  • Commentary
  • لا، القبة الحديدية لا تحمي أرواح الفلسطينيين

    الجدل المستمر (والمبالغ فيه إلى حد كبير) حول قرار أعضاء الكونغرس التقدميين بإعاقة إدراج مليار دولار في التمويل الإضافي لنظام الدفاع الصاروخي الإسرائيلي المسمى بالقبة الحديدية، إلى جانب الـ 3.8 مليار دولار من المساعدات العسكرية الأمريكية التي تتلقاها إسرائيل بالفعل، كشف عن تصدعات في داخل الحزب الديمقراطي وكذلك عن مدى إمكانية إجراء نقاش حقيقي حول القضايا المتعلقة بإسرائيل/فلسطين في واشنطن.

    September 27, 2021

    No, Iron Dome doesn’t save Palestinian lives
    Photo by ANAS BABA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • No, Iron Dome doesn’t save Palestinian lives

    While much of the discourse surrounding the Iron Dome controversy is mired in hysterics and hyperbole, some have put forward a more rational case for providing additional funding for it. One of the standard arguments advanced in recent days is that Iron Dome is crucial not only for saving Israeli lives but is equally important (perhaps even more so) for saving Palestinian lives. This claim has been echoed by numerous American and Israeli analysts and even Members of Congress, and seems to have been accepted by a number of journalists as well. But is it actually true?

    September 24, 2021

    The legacy of 9/11 in the Middle East Peace Process
    Photo by Scott Nelson/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The legacy of 9/11 in the Middle East Peace Process

    As we mark 20 years since the 9/11 terror attacks and the subsequent U.S. interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq, and other protracted elements of the ill-fated and ill-conceived “war on terror,” it is easy to overlook other disastrous legacies of U.S. policy in the post-9/11 era. This is particularly true in the case of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, where Washington’s response to 9/11 effectively marked the beginning of the long, tortured death of the Middle East Peace Process, and with it hopes for a two-state solution.

    September 10, 2021

    After 18 years, Palestinian families can finally live together: The end of Israel’s 2003 citizenship law
    Photo by MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • After 18 years, Palestinian families can finally live together: The end of Israel’s 2003 citizenship law

    The expiration of Israel’s 2003 citizenship law early last month has finally ended the suffering of roughly 30,000 Palestinian families and paved the way for their reunification. Despite the efforts of the Zionist political parties to renew the law, the abstention from voting of the two Arab Palestinian Knesset members from the United Arab List — which, for the first time, is represented in Israel’s new coalition government — blocked the majority needed to extend the long-standing “temporary” law, which subsequently expired on July 6. While this is welcome news for many Palestinian families, the defeat of this notorious law is by no means a panacea. Until there is real change in Israel, Palestinians, both those who are citizens of Israel as well as those in the occupied territories, will continue to face legal obstacles when it comes to obtaining their basic rights.

    August 10, 2021

    Going back to school on Palestinian textbooks
    Photo by HAZEM BADER/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Going back to school on Palestinian textbooks

    It would be an understatement to say that the Georg Eckert Institute for International Textbook Research in Germany has written the book on how to analyze textbooks. The Institute has actually published many books — ones that are meticulous, detailed, and dispassionate. Now the Institute has published one more, this time on Palestinian textbooks.

    July 12, 2021

    The “Palestinian exception”: Social media censorship of Palestinian activism
    Photo by Gokhan Kurtaran/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • The “Palestinian exception”: Social media censorship of Palestinian activism

    In a landscape of suppression and retaliation against Palestinian journalists and activists at the hands of Israel, social media networks have been at once critical organizing platforms and tools for exacerbating censorship.

    June 23, 2021

    Could climate risk insurance reduce the cost of climate change adaptation in the Middle East?
    Photo by FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Could climate risk insurance reduce the cost of climate change adaptation in the Middle East?

    As one of the hottest and driest spots globally, the Middle East region faces some of the worst impacts of climate change. Many of these events have not only been socially and politically devastating but have also resulted in huge financial losses for countries already experiencing economic insecurity. Countries in MENA have found themselves increasingly exposed to extreme weather events and natural disasters, which have affected more than 40 million people and cost more than $20 billion over the past 30 years, according to the World Bank. During the last five years alone, 120 disasters were recorded in the region, resulting in an average of $1 billion annually in damages and losses.

    June 23, 2021

    The Trilemma of Power, Aid, and Peacebuilding in the Israeli-Palestinian Context
    Xinhua/xiongsihao via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Trilemma of Power, Aid, and Peacebuilding in the Israeli-Palestinian Context

    On Dec. 21, 2020, the United States Congress passed the Nita M. Lowey Middle East Partnership for Peace Act. The new law provides $250 million over five years to expand peace and reconciliation programs between Israelis and Palestinians as well as to support projects bolstering the Palestinian economy. But such programs are unlikely to be effective because the whole approach on which they are based is structurally flawed in two critical ways: first, because it is disconnected from local political, social, cultural, and economic processes and expectations; and second, because it tends to reinforce the inequalities that sustain the conflict between the two sides while undermining the declared goals of this intervention.

    June 21, 2021

    Up for Debate: The Biden administration's approach to Israel/Palestine
    Photo by ALEX BRANDON/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Up for Debate: The Biden administration's approach to Israel/Palestine

    The Biden administration has repeatedly said that Israelis and Palestinians “deserve equal measures of security, freedom, opportunity and dignity” (sometimes expressed as “equal measures of freedom, security, dignity and prosperity”). Since the recent crisis in Gaza and East Jerusalem, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and other U.S. officials have reiterated this formula in one form or another. What is its significance? What does (or should) it mean in the context of the Biden administration’s approach to Israel/Palestine — particularly given the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, pending expulsions in East Jerusalem, and ongoing settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem? We asked eight experts to weigh in with their thoughts.

    June 21, 2021

    With the Hope Line, Iran aims to boost seawater transfer to fight growing drought
    Photo by Presidency of Iran / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • With the Hope Line, Iran aims to boost seawater transfer to fight growing drought

    Blessed with milder temperatures than its Gulf neighbors as well as abundant rain and snow fall, Iran is one of the last countries in the region to introduce a seawater transfer plan to fight unprecedented levels of drought. The plan, once fully implemented, could help build water corridors linking the shores of Iran’s southern Gulf to those of its northern Caspian Sea. Named the Hope Transfer Line, the plan promises prosperity for farmers and industrialists, and potable water for communities in some 10,000 villages and urban areas located in so-called Red Zones, a category that applies to regions coping with severe water scarcity. 

    June 9, 2021

    The nascent Israeli government: The thread that binds?
    Photo by RONEN ZVULUN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The nascent Israeli government: The thread that binds?

    There is only one thread holding together the unprecedentedly disparate parties that will establish and support the nascent Israeli government announced on the night of June 2, an hour before the midnight deadline. That thread is, of course, a shared loathing for Benjamin Netanyahu. Whether that thread will even get the new government past its first hurdle, which is a vote of confidence in the Knesset, much less to its theoretical four years, is an open question. Until recently no one could have imagined such a political monstrosity might be conceived, let alone gestated, but there’s a decent chance this government will get off the ground.

    June 4, 2021

    مجلس حقوق الإنسان التابع للأمم المتحدة يوافق على لجنة غزة لتقصي الحقائق
  • Commentary
  • مجلس حقوق الإنسان التابع للأمم المتحدة يوافق على لجنة غزة لتقصي الحقائق

    “إن استعداد مجلس حقوق الإنسان لإنشاء لجنة دائمة ذات تفويض شامل يشير إلى مدى التغيير في التصورات الدولية للصراع الإسرائيلي الفلسطيني في السنوات القليلة الماضية”.

    June 2, 2021

    Greece and Cyprus can play a modest role in advancing Israeli-Palestinian peace
  • Analysis
  • Greece and Cyprus can play a modest role in advancing Israeli-Palestinian peace

    In March 2021, the Eastern Mediterranean Gas Forum held its first meeting as a recognized international organization. Delegations from member countries – including Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Israel, Italy, Jordan, and Palestine – gathered in Cairo to organize a regional gas market. The forum is a unique space that offers a platform for dialogue between European and Middle Eastern countries. Furthermore, it is rare that Israeli and Palestinian delegations cooperate on the international stage. Yet, as the inaugural meeting demonstrated, the conflict is never too far away. When the delegates voted on whether to grant the United Arab Emirates observer status in the forum – a privilege given to the United States and European Union – Palestine vetoed, a clear demonstration of Ramallah’s frustration with the normalization process that started a few months ago.

    May 21, 2021