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Three signs of impending famine in Syria absent immediate action
Photo by Muhammed Said/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Three signs of impending famine in Syria absent immediate action

    The pace of military action in Syria has plateaued. With the assumption of a frozen conflict comes the attendant assumption that humanitarian conditions are also likely to be stable. This could not be further from the truth. Humanitarian conditions continue to deteriorate, driven by three factors, and urgent action is now needed to avoid a famine.

    December 10, 2021

    OPEC+: Locked in a Russia-US-Saudi triangle
    Photo by Omar Marques/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • OPEC+: Locked in a Russia-US-Saudi triangle

    The events of recent months, including a series of critical statements by international players about the reluctance of OPEC+ to raise output beyond its established quotas, have clearly demonstrated the changing realities in the oil market. In addition to global uncertainty, the dynamics between Saudi Arabia, Russia, and the U.S., as well as the actions of Asian oil consumers, have become other key factors shaping the cartel’s behavior.

    أوبك بلس تواجه اختبارات جديدة لاستراتيجيتها لموازنة السوق في عام 2022
  • Commentary
  • أوبك بلس تواجه اختبارات جديدة لاستراتيجيتها لموازنة السوق في عام 2022

    عندما أعلن البيت الأبيض في عهد الرئيس جو بايدن أنه قد نجح في ضم العديد من الدول الرئيسية المستهلكة للنفط في محاولة لتنسيق عمليات الإفراج عن احتياطيات البترول الاستراتيجية (SPRs) حول العالم، بدا أن هذا سيكون العامل الرئيسي الوحيد في أسواق النفط التي ستناقشه أوبك بلس في

    Turkey’s self-made currency crisis
    Photo by OZAN KOSE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Turkey’s self-made currency crisis

    Following the resignation of the finance minister and his replacement by a loyalist on Dec. 2, the Turkish lira continued its steady decline against the dollar, bringing its losses for the year to nearly 50%. The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey’s early cuts to the policy rate since September have resulted in an exodus of foreign capital and a rush in demand for foreign exchange among domestic investors.

    December 3, 2021

    Energy Prospects in the Gulf: The Oil Price Ascent, in Brief
    Photo by Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Energy Prospects in the Gulf: The Oil Price Ascent, in Brief

    While oil prices have rebounded before soaring since the depths of collapse in the spring of 2020 — with Brent crude prices skyrocketing from $19 per barrel in April 2020 to a three-year high of $86 per barrel in October 2021 — the prospects for a sustained high oil price for Gulf producers is unlikely.

    Iranians are disillusioned with Biden’s soft approach to the Islamic Republic
    Photo by FATMEH NASR/ISNA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iranians are disillusioned with Biden’s soft approach to the Islamic Republic

    If the Biden administration makes concessions to appease the Islamic Republic of Iran as part of the recently resumed Vienna nuclear talks, it will be a historic mistake. The Islamic Republic is facing a deep legitimacy crisis of its own making, as a series of disastrous decisions have hardened the people’s views against the regime. These days, anyone who is seen to be throwing the Islamic Republic a lifeline will be wildly unpopular among Iranians.

    December 1, 2021

    OPEC+ faces new tests to its market balancing strategy in 2022
    Photo by Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • OPEC+ faces new tests to its market balancing strategy in 2022

    When President Joe Biden’s White House announced that it had successfully enlisted several major oil-consuming countries in an effort to coordinate releases from strategic petroleum reserves (SPRs) around the world, it looked like this would be the only major factor in oil markets that OPEC+ would need to consider at its upcoming meeting on Dec. 2. Then came Omicron. The newly discovered variant of the COVID-19 virus sent benchmark oil prices plunging on Nov. 26 as uncertainty over its impact roiled global markets.

    The Fragile State of Food Security in the Maghreb: Implication of the 2021 Cereal Grains Crisis in Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco
    Photo by FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • The Fragile State of Food Security in the Maghreb: Implication of the 2021 Cereal Grains Crisis in Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco

    North Africa has entered a food security crisis. Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco are witnessing food inflation levels not seen since the civil unrest of the Arab Spring a decade ago. Although the Maghreb’s current food crisis was precipitated by the local and global economic shocks brought on by the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and its 2021 aftermath, the structural fragility of the food systems in Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco is responsible for severity of the problem. At the core of this fragility is the failure to implement adequate measures to address the impact of increased water scarcity and debilitating climate change.

    The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor: Slower may be better
    Photo by Saeed Ahmad/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor: Slower may be better

    In September, China and Pakistan convened the tenth session of their joint coordination committee that oversees the CPEC — the largest of the BRI corridors. The long-anticipated meeting ultimately yielded no major breakthroughs. The momentum of CPEC appears to be losing steam once again, but for Pakistan, slower may actually be better.

    November 3, 2021

    Will China save the Afghan economy?
    Photo by Oliver Weiken/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Will China save the Afghan economy?

    Afghanistan’s economy is collapsing. The Taliban’s forceful seizure of power led to a curtailment of almost all foreign aid, a devastating development for a nation overwhelmingly dependent on international assistance. Widespread drought, pervasive corruption, the perennially inadequate use of the country’s human capital, and a population largely unvaccinated against COVID-19 have exacerbated this longstanding problem of foreign financial dependence.

    November 1, 2021

    Rural deprivation and regime durability in Iran
    Photo by Isna News Agency/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Rural deprivation and regime durability in Iran

    During the National Day of Villages and Nomads in Iran on Oct. 6, President Ebrahim Raisi visited Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province and spoke about combatting rural deprivation, an issue that has become central to Raisi’s domestic agenda.

    November 1, 2021

    Expert Views: What should be the key outcomes from COP26?
    Photo by Hasan Esen/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Expert Views: What should be the key outcomes from COP26?

    As the U.N. Climate Change Conference (COP26) kicks off in Glasgow, climate change is front and center on the global agenda. Few regions of the world have more at stake than the Middle East and North Africa, given the current environmental and sustainability challenges and potential future scenarios. Experts from across MEI weigh in with their thoughts on what should be the key outcomes from COP26.

    A storm brews over the Black Sea: Turkey’s contradictory maritime policy
    Photo by Yörük Işık
  • Analysis
  • A storm brews over the Black Sea: Turkey’s contradictory maritime policy

    Turkey’s official policy supports the territorial integrity of Ukraine and Georgia, and it sells UAVs and ships to Ukraine. Yet, trade continues with the Russian-occupied territories of Abkhazia and Crimea. By allowing this illegal trade, Turkey undermines both its own credibility and its trading partners’ security. Shipped goods not only help connect occupied zones to Russia, but trade also brings hard currency into these zones, which are outside the international banking system.

    October 29, 2021

    Looking ahead to COP26: How recent developments could shape this year’s meeting
    Ian Forsyth/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Looking ahead to COP26: How recent developments could shape this year’s meeting

    Next week, tens of thousands of world leaders, negotiators, scientists, business executives, activists, and observers from all over will gather in Glasgow, Scotland for the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference, which will run from Oct. 31 to Nov. 12. Also known as the Conference of the Parties (COP), this distinguished body meets annually to make decisions regarding the implementation of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which aims to “prevent anthropogenic interference with the climate system.”

    October 29, 2021

    Why Hezbollah wanted the Ministries of Finance and Public Works
    Photo by Bilal Jawich/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Why Hezbollah wanted the Ministries of Finance and Public Works

    After 13 months of political gridlock, economic collapse, and civil unrest, Lebanese politicians formed a new government on Sept. 10. Three-time Prime Minister Najib Mikati heads a new cabinet, the first since the previous one resigned in the wake of Beirut’s devastating port blast in August 2020. Though the formation of a new government provides a way forward to address the myriad crises facing the country, it falls far short of the near-revolutionary changes demanded by Lebanese citizens protesting in the streets. Instead of non-partisan specialists forming a new unity government, Lebanon’s notorious sectarian elites have handpicked a government of technocrats close to them to handle the current situation, the most brazen of which are the new ministers of finance and public works.

    October 27, 2021