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Georgia: European aspirations, Middle Eastern realities
Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (R) and Georgia's Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia (L) hold a joint press conference at the Presidential Complex in Ankara on October 31, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • Georgia: European aspirations, Middle Eastern realities

    Since regaining its independence nearly three decades ago, European aspirations have been a central part of Georgia’s political agenda and identity. But the reality is more complicated and Georgia is, in a meaningful sense, part of both greater Europe and the greater Middle East.

    January 7, 2020

    The Military-Security Dimension of Israel-Southeast Asia Relations
  • Analysis
  • The Military-Security Dimension of Israel-Southeast Asia Relations

    Over the past two decades, Israel has developed robust bilateral relationships with China, India, and Singapore. Israel has also succeeded in forging ties with Japan and South Korea. More recently, Israel has devoted considerable attention to strengthening its relations with Southeast Asian countries, particularly Vietnam, the Philippines, Thailand and Myanmar. Military-security cooperation in the form of arms trade as well as technology transfer and licensed production has emerged as an important dimension of Israel’s relations with Southeast Asian countries.

    January 7, 2020

    Escalation with Iran now dominates 2020
    A drone photo shows thousands of Iranians attend the funeral ceremony of Qasem Soleimani, commander of Iranian Revolutionary Guards' Quds Forces, who was killed in a U.S. drone airstrike in Iraq, in Tehran, Iran on January 06, 2020.
  • Commentary
  • Escalation with Iran now dominates 2020

    Trump has taken such a forward-leaning and aggressive position now that he has set himself, and the U.S., in a conflict trap that he might not be able to defuse.

    January 6, 2020

    Iraq is right where it doesn’t want to be
    Mourners surround a car carrying the coffins of Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani and Iraqi paramilitary chief Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, killed in a US air strike, during their funeral procession in Kadhimiya, a Shiite pilgrimage district of Baghdad, on January 4, 2020.
  • Commentary
  • Iraq is right where it doesn’t want to be

    While yesterday’s vote in the Iraqi Council of Representatives on a decision to remove U.S. forces is not legally binding, it creates dynamics inside the U.S. and Iraq that make a U.S. decision to remove its forces all but inevitable.

    January 6, 2020

    Storms on the horizon for Turkey in 2020
     Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan makes a speech as he attends the Symposium on Urban Security at the Presidential Complex in Ankara, Turkey on January 02, 2020.
  • Commentary
  • Storms on the horizon for Turkey in 2020

    Erdogan may want to hold early elections in 2020 to mitigate the fallout of a worsening economy and deny the new parties enough time to organize.

    The future of the UK’s relationship with the Maghreb
    Algerian protesters wave national flags during an anti-government demonstration in the capital Algiers, on December 20, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • The future of the UK’s relationship with the Maghreb

    The UK’s impending exit from the EU will present a new chapter for British interests in and posture toward the region. If the UK is to find a trade-off for loss of diplomatic and economic heft, it will need to re-prioritize its engagement efforts. Policy continuity toward Morocco and Tunisia appears inevitable; Algeria, in contrast, promises great opportunity for an evolving relationship.

    January 6, 2020

    Big questions for Libya in 2020
    Thousands of people gather at Martyr's Square within a funeral ceremony held after an airstrike on a military school in the south of the Libyan capital of Tripoli by jets loyal to renegade military commander Khalifa Haftar, in Tripoli, Libya on January 05, 2020.
  • Commentary
  • Big questions for Libya in 2020

    Strong U.S. leadership could still make a difference to counter the threats arising from the ongoing proxy war, but the Trump White House appears mainly to have other things on its mind.

    The prospects for Syria in 2020 are grim
    An aerial view taken on December 8, 2019 shows the damage caused by reported Syrian regime and Russian air strikes the previous day in the town of Al-Bara in the south of Syria's Idlib province, that killed at least four civilans, including a child and wounding several others.
  • Commentary
  • The prospects for Syria in 2020 are grim

    Militarily, the most concerning issue remains the fate of Idlib, where at least three million people remain crammed in a killing-zone that encompasses just 3.5 percent of Syria’s territory

    Israel in 2020: Heading for yet another election
    Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on January 5, 2020.
  • Commentary
  • Israel in 2020: Heading for yet another election

    Politically Netanyahu seems to be about as popular as before his long-awaited indictment, which portends another inconclusive election and a political system unable to break the deadlock.

    January 6, 2020