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New Geopolitical Realities of the Caucasus: Reevaluating Georgia’s National Security Strategy
  • Analysis
  • New Geopolitical Realities of the Caucasus: Reevaluating Georgia’s National Security Strategy

    We are moving toward a new status-quo in the South Caucasus, with different actors facing different challenges as well as opportunities. Georgia will be impacted by the outcome of the war in multiple ways, and the country will need a strategy to adapt to the new realities, taking into consideration gains and losses of the parties actively involved in the conflict, as well as post-conflict development.

    December 10, 2020

    Elections 2020: A small victory for the right, but Romania won’t deviate from its Western path
  • Analysis
  • Elections 2020: A small victory for the right, but Romania won’t deviate from its Western path

    Romania is one of Eastern Europe’s largest countries. It also happens to be — alongside Poland — one of Europe’s most pro-Western electorates. However, results of Sunday’s legislative elections suggest Romania could once again be entering murky political waters.

    U.S. Economic Engagement with the Black Sea Region Must Be a Priority for 2021
  • Analysis
  • U.S. Economic Engagement with the Black Sea Region Must Be a Priority for 2021

    The Black Sea region is home to some of America’s strongest allies and most vocal advocates of continued Euro-Atlantic cooperation and integration. The Trump Administration’s commitment to the region has led with U.S. support for regional security. It is in America’s national interest to double down on the successes of the Trump Administration’s regional economic engagement strategy, and establish trade and investment initiatives as the forefront of U.S. policy toward the Black Sea region.

    December 9, 2020

    Special Briefing: The Trump administration’s potential last-minute Middle East policy moves
  • Commentary
  • Special Briefing: The Trump administration’s potential last-minute Middle East policy moves

    From Israel/Palestine and Lebanon to Iran and Afghanistan, there are a number of areas where the Trump administration may make policy moves before leaving office on Jan. 20. Experts from across MEI weigh in with their thoughts on what to watch out for over the next seven weeks.

    December 3, 2020

    Economic desperation and dependence are driving the Palestinian Authority’s political decisions
    Photo by Issam Rimawi/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Economic desperation and dependence are driving the Palestinian Authority’s political decisions

    Faced with the Trump and Netanyahu governments’ persistent dismissal of the Palestinians and their rights, the PA has spent the better part of the last three years threatening to terminate all relations with Israel, and even to withdraw the Palestine Liberation Organization’s (PLO) recognition of Israel. The deteriorating situation culminated in Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ May 2020 declaration that the Palestinian leadership was absolved “of all the agreements and understandings with the American and Israeli governments.” Notwithstanding previous similar warnings from Abbas in recent years, the announcement prompted speculation among Palestinian political parties, Palestinians at home and in the diaspora, scholars, activists, and journalists over the future of Palestinian politics in the post-Oslo era.

    December 2, 2020

    The Trans Adriatic Pipeline: Why it Matters and What Comes Next?
  • Analysis
  • The Trans Adriatic Pipeline: Why it Matters and What Comes Next?

    On November 14, the Transadriatic Pipeline (TAP) commenced operation. It is difficult to overstate the significance of this development. The new transit link running from Greece’s border with Turkey all the way to Italy, via a 878-stretch that also crosses Albania and the Adriatic Sea, makes the much-discussed Southern Gas Corridor a reality. It brings an annual 10 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas from the Shah Deniz offshore field in the Caspian to consumers in the EU and the Western Balkans, helps diversify supplies away from Russia, and enhances Azerbaijan’s position on European markets.

    December 2, 2020

    Biden could generate momentum for Israeli-Palestinian peace
  • Analysis
  • Biden could generate momentum for Israeli-Palestinian peace

    While the Israeli-Palestinian issue and renewal of negotiations is unlikely to feature prominently on his agenda anytime soon, Biden’s election generates renewed positive momentum.

    November 30, 2020

    Absent with Leave: Moscow’s Deficient Eurasian Military Alliance
  • Analysis
  • Absent with Leave: Moscow’s Deficient Eurasian Military Alliance

    The Russian government has spent more than a decade constructing a multilateral security structure for the former Soviet space—the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). Yet, despite the occurrence this year of some of the most serious crises in Russia’s neighboring former Soviet republics, the CSTO has been notable for its absence in the Kremlin’s response.

    November 29, 2020

    Maia Sandu: Common Sense Prevails in Moldova
  • Analysis
  • Maia Sandu: Common Sense Prevails in Moldova

    Recent presidential elections in the Republic of Moldova were won by Maia Sandu of the Action and Solidarity Party (PAS), a party advocating for judicial and anti-corruption reform and for rapprochement with the European Union (EU). Sandu becomes the first female president of Europe’s poorest country, securing 57.7 percent of the vote ahead of incumbent Igor Dodon’s 42.2 percent. The result followed an unprecedented election campaign during which verbal violence was widely witnessed.

    November 25, 2020

    Biden’s presidency cannot mean a return to the status quo for Palestinians
    Palestinians wave national flags as they march in the streets of the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, calling for the cessation of divisions between Fatah and Hamas and the unification of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, on January 12, 2019.
  • Commentary
  • Biden’s presidency cannot mean a return to the status quo for Palestinians

    On Nov. 17 and 19, MEI’s Program on Palestine and Palestinian-Israeli Affairs convened a two-part series looking at the future of Palestinian politics and the Palestinian national movement. Below is a summary of Part 2, “Toward a Palestinian National Strategy,” which examined the efficacy of the Palestinian leadership’s current focus on a negotiated two-state settlement, as well as alternative visions and means of liberation, such as a one-state solution and the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement.

    November 25, 2020

    Biden’s presidency indicates new opportunities for Palestinian politics
    A man waves a Palestinian flag while protesting.
  • Commentary
  • Biden’s presidency indicates new opportunities for Palestinian politics

    On Nov. 17 and 19, MEI’s Program on Palestine and Palestinian-Israeli Affairs convened a two-part series looking at the future of Palestinian politics and the Palestinian national movement. Below is a summary of Part 1, “Reviving Palestinian Political Life,” which focused on issues such as national reconciliation, elections, succession, the future of institutions like the Palestinian Authority (PA), and reform of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).

    November 24, 2020

    Russia’s Peacekeeping in the South Caucasus
  • Analysis
  • Russia’s Peacekeeping in the South Caucasus

    The recent ceasefire agreement signed by Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia halted the armed phase of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict following 45 days of fighting and thousands of military and civilian lives lost on both sides. Russian peacekeepers have already been deployed to the conflict zone to oversee implementation of the agreement. It now remains to be seen whether they will be joined by Turkish counterparts, either in the field or at a joint monitoring center in Azerbaijan. The latter is the first disagreement between Moscow and Ankara over peacekeeping in the region.

    November 23, 2020

    The geopolitics of Crimea are important, but we mustn't overlook the persecution of Crimean Tatars
  • Analysis
  • The geopolitics of Crimea are important, but we mustn't overlook the persecution of Crimean Tatars

    When commentators and policymakers discuss Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014, the focus is often placed on geo-politics and Black Sea security. This is understandable. While the geo-politics of Crimea are important, one should not overlook the tragedy taking place to many of the people living there. This is especially true with the Crimean Tatar community – an ethnically Turkic and religiously Sunni Islam minority population which has faced decades of religious and political persecution under Russian domination.

    November 23, 2020

    Pompeo’s settlement visit caps a four-year effort to destroy the two-state solution
  • Commentary
  • Pompeo’s settlement visit caps a four-year effort to destroy the two-state solution

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made history this week by visiting two Israeli settlements, the Psagot winery located on the outskirts of Ramallah in the heart of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, and the City of David located in the Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan just outside Jerusalem’s Old City, the first ever such visits by a sitting American secretary of state. The visits were clearly aimed at legitimizing and normalizing Israel’s settlement enterprise, which is considered illegal under international law, in keeping with the administration’s approach of the last three years.

    November 20, 2020