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How is jihadi militancy in Yemen evolving?
jihadi militancy in Yemen
  • Analysis
  • How is jihadi militancy in Yemen evolving?

    Regional conflict and internal chaos have allowed militant jihadi groups to rise and flourish in Yemen. This paper analyzes two of the most prominent such groups, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and the Islamic State in Yemen (ISY), by scrutinizing the factors that led to their respective ascents and examining the challenges and pressures that have caused their respective declines.

    July 25, 2018

    Anti-India Sentiments in South Asia: Terrorist Recruitment Narratives
    antique map of India before contemporary boundaries
  • Analysis
  • Anti-India Sentiments in South Asia: Terrorist Recruitment Narratives

    India’s strategic choices in South Asia have prompted it to interfere in the domestic affairs of some of its neighbors. As a result, India has become a part of domestic politics of most of its neighboring states where anti-India sentiment is often used to bolster the nationalist credentials of various political formations. Importantly, such sentiments have been leveraged by Jihadist groups — especially those operating in Pakistan and Bangladesh — to shore up support for themselves.

    July 23, 2018

    Sectarianism in the Middle East and Asia
    Rohinga village burning as they flee
  • Analysis
  • Sectarianism in the Middle East and Asia

    Sectarian-based conflicts — or at any rate, spasms of intercommunal violence characterized as such — are certainly not new. Nor is Iraq or, for that matter, the Middle East as a whole, the only locus of conflict depicted as being sectarian in nature, as the disturbing events in Burma/Myanmar, as well as in the Central African Repubic (CAR) and Nigeria clearly illustrate. With increasing frequency, media accounts of the civil war in Syria describe it in sectarian terms and report that the violence there has inflamed “sectarian tension” throughout the Gulf and beyond.

    July 16, 2018

    Have we reached the end of the Syrian conflict?
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Have we reached the end of the Syrian conflict?

    Last week, rebel forces in southwestern Syria agreed to a Russia-brokered deal to surrender Deraa province and lay down their arms, possibly securing strategic victory for the Assad regime in the long-running Syrian conflict. MEI’s Robert Ford and Charles Lister join guest host Gerald Feierstein to discuss the significance of these developments and whether the United States is preparing to withdraw from Syria in a broader agreement with Russia.

    July 10, 2018

    The decline of the US’s role in Syria
    bombed urban area in Syria
  • Analysis
  • The decline of the US’s role in Syria

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Charles Lister, Alex Vatanka, Randa Slim, and Marvin G. Weinbaum provide analysis on the US’s silence amid the Assad regime’s expansion, the Iranian president’s trip to Europe, the uptick in violence after Iraq’s elections, and the upcoming Pakistani parliamentary elections.

    The decline of the US’s role in Syria
    Charles Lister, Senior Fellow

    Where is ISIS today?
  • Video
  • Where is ISIS today?

    After years of international intervention, ISIS was routed from its Iraqi stronghold in Mosul and from its so-called capital in the Syrian city of Raqqa last year. However, the group remains dangerous both in the region and globally. Charles Lister discusses how ISIS is operating today, and what the international community must do to combat it.

    June 26, 2018

    Breaking down Iraq’s parliamentary election
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Breaking down Iraq’s parliamentary election

    Amb. Lukman Faily, Iraq’s ambassador to the United States from 2013-2016, and Randa Slim, director of MEI’s program on Conflict Resolution and Track II Dialogues, join host Paul Salem to analyze the results of Iraq’s parliamentary elections and their implications for Iraq, the region, and U.S. policy going forward.

    May 17, 2018

    The battles in, above and around Syria
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • The battles in, above and around Syria

    Amb. Robert Ford and Charles Lister join host Paul Salem to discuss last week’s U.S. airstrikes in Syria in response to the Assad government’s ongoing use of chemical weapons, what the Trump administration is signaling about America’s plans there, and the escalating standoff between Israeli and Iranian forces in the country.

    April 19, 2018

    Violent extremism: historical patterns and precedents, ancient and modern
  • Video
  • Violent extremism: historical patterns and precedents, ancient and modern

    Middle Eastern history is often portrayed as a succession of empires and political orders harassed and occasionally brought down by violent opponents–usually labeled as terrorists at the time. This was true in ancient times as well as modern. And today’s violent extremist groups resurrect historical narratives and grievances to fuel contemporary conflict.

    March 19, 2018

    U.S.-Russia Dialogue and Preventing Regional Confrontation
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • U.S.-Russia Dialogue and Preventing Regional Confrontation

    Irina Zvyagelskaya, of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow and Randa Slim, director of MEI’s Program on Conflict Resolution and Track II Dialogues, join host Paul Salem to discuss U.S. and Russian efforts to find shared interests in the region, from Syria to Yemen, and to avoid confrontation and escalation.

    March 8, 2018

    Regional cooperation in the Middle East: the Baghdad Declaration
  • Video
  • Regional cooperation in the Middle East: the Baghdad Declaration

    Since 2014, the Middle East Institute (MEI) has convened the Middle East Dialogue, a Track 1.5 initiative involving current and former officials and senior experts from across the Middle East as well as from China, Europe, Russia and the United States. These meetings focus on the conflicts in Syria and Iraq, and on the principles and architecture of a new regional cooperation framework in the Middle East. At the Dialogue’s most recent meeting in Baghdad, the group issued a consensus document outlining Good Neighborhood Principles for the Middle East.

    March 8, 2018

    Oil in Iraq: pathways to enabling better governance
  • Video
  • Oil in Iraq: pathways to enabling better governance

    Despite setbacks from the war against ISIS, Iraq remains the world’s fourth largest producer of oil, second only to Saudi Arabia among OPEC states. However, the administration of this vital natural resource has been plagued by corruption and disputes over how revenues should be allocated to promote equitable economic growth. The issue has drawn Iraq’s ethnic, sectarian, and political divisions to the surface.
     

    March 6, 2018