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From oil wells to power cells: How Saudi Arabia and its Gulf neighbors are securing their future through battery technology
Photo by AMER HILABI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • From oil wells to power cells: How Saudi Arabia and its Gulf neighbors are securing their future through battery technology

    As the world shifts toward a more sustainable future, the GCC states are also embracing this profound transition, moving from oil wells to power cells. With their vast resources, strategic location, and commitment to sustainability, the Gulf countries are uniquely positioned to become major players in the global battery supply chain. By embracing the potential of battery technology, these nations are not just preparing for a post-oil future but are actively shaping it.

    August 24, 2023

    A US security guarantee to Israel should help to advance Israeli-Palestinian peace, not avoid it
    Photo by DEBBIE HILL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • A US security guarantee to Israel should help to advance Israeli-Palestinian peace, not avoid it

    It has been nearly 70 years since Israel first asked the U.S. to sign a bilateral defense treaty. Ever since then, the idea of a formal security agreement has resurfaced from time to time, only to be struck down, due to an understanding that it does not serve the two sides’ actual needs. Prime Minister Netanyahu is currently floating the idea once again, but the U.S. can make use of his interest in a security upgrade to revive a different idea instead: the decade-old security plan for the two-state solution, known as the Allen Plan.

    August 23, 2023

    Ben Samuels | 'Taking the Edge Off the Middle East' Ep. 3
  • Podcast
  • Ben Samuels | 'Taking the Edge Off the Middle East' Ep. 3

    Middle East Focus Presents: ‘Taking the Edge Off the Middle East’ with Brian Katulis

    A series of casual conversations with leading policy professionals on the most important happenings in the Middle East today – hosted by MEI VP for Policy Brian Katulis.

    Ben Samuels – U.S. correspondent for Haaretz – sits down with Brian to discuss how he got into journalism, the state of politics in Israel, and the country’s ongoing judicial overhaul. 

    *Note: this episode was recorded on June 8, 2023.

    Lebanon needs a renewed donor support strategy
    Francesca Volpi/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Lebanon needs a renewed donor support strategy

    Lebanon needs a new aid strategy to preserve the country’s ability to one day recover. What is required is a donor strategy that walks on two legs: a first leg that offers a big reconstruction push conditioned on economic and institutional reforms and, in parallel, a second leg that provides urgent support to the Lebanese population.

    August 22, 2023

    Power cuts in Egypt: A political liability for Sisi ahead of the upcoming elections
    Islam Safwat/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Power cuts in Egypt: A political liability for Sisi ahead of the upcoming elections

    A brutal heat wave tormenting Egypt since mid-July, resulting in lengthy and repeated power cuts, has turned into a political liability for President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi ahead of his expected campaign to run for a third, six-year term early next year.

    August 18, 2023

    A Saudi-Israel Deal Could Pay Dividends for the Global Economy
  • Commentary
  • A Saudi-Israel Deal Could Pay Dividends for the Global Economy

    The Biden administration is working on a deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia that could be a game changer for the Middle East. Such an opening would show just how much the tectonic plates in the region are shifting away from regional tensions, civil wars, and threats from terrorism toward a new, more promising phase of greater stability and prosperity. 

    Syria’s economic freefall continues despite Arab League return
    Photo by LOUAI BESHARA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Syria’s economic freefall continues despite Arab League return

    Syria’s dramatic readmission into the Arab League in May was perceived as a turning point for the country’s fortunes. Although Damascus may have come in from the cold diplomatically, there has been little change on the economic front, where the situation remains dire. Since the start of May, the Syrian pound has lost over 70% of its value and shows no sign of stabilizing.

    The successes and failures of Turkey’s new economic team
    Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The successes and failures of Turkey’s new economic team

    It has been two months since Turkey’s new economic team took over and some progress has been made. Market normalization has begun and the risk of a balance-of-payments crisis has been reduced. At the same time, however, inflation is gaining new momentum, the budget deficit is sharply worsening, and no reform agenda has yet been announced to tackle these threats.

    August 14, 2023

    Alawites in Syria breaking silence?: Criticizing the dictatorship from within
    From social media
  • Commentary
  • Alawites in Syria breaking silence?: Criticizing the dictatorship from within

    Recently, a notable trend has emerged among Alawites in Syria’s Assad regime-held areas, including those from powerful families. Writers, journalists, and rank-and-file Alawites have taken to social media platforms to express their deep frustration with the regime’s economic policies and the centralized nature of the dictatorship under President Bashar al-Assad, as well as his wife Asma al-Assad’s outsized influence and corruption linked to her secretive “economic council.”

    August 11, 2023

    Five factors to watch in US diplomatic efforts on a possible Israel-Saudi deal
    Photo by AMER HILABI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Five factors to watch in US diplomatic efforts on a possible Israel-Saudi deal

    Forging a deal establishing open, normal bilateral ties between Saudi Arabia and Israel would be a major feat with plenty of potential perils along the way — the diplomatic equivalent of climbing Mount Everest. If done right, the result would be historic and transformative for the Middle East with positive geopolitical repercussions. Here are five factors to watch as the Biden administration continues its efforts to produce a major diplomatic breakthrough in the region.

    Japan looks to the Gulf as it bets big on hydrogen
    Photo by Akio Kon/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Japan looks to the Gulf as it bets big on hydrogen

    As a trailblazer in hydrogen diplomacy, Japan is seeking to develop a new pattern of energy interdependence with its longstanding partners, the Gulf Arab states — countries that are promising production bases for and exporters of green hydrogen and ammonia, and whose leaders have come to regard the development of clean hydrogen as an attractive way to diversify their economies.

    Breaking down the details of the UAE’s climate strategy
    Photo by Waleed Zein/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • Breaking down the details of the UAE’s climate strategy

    In the race to manage climate change, the UAE is ramping up its efforts in a bid to accelerate its transition to a green economy. In the first two weeks of July 2023, it published several important documents laying out its actions and objectives, including a revised version of the national climate pledges it made under the Paris Agreement, as well as a number of targeted policies and strategies.

    August 1, 2023