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America and Iran’s Tough Tango with the Gulf States
  • Commentary
  • America and Iran’s Tough Tango with the Gulf States

    Since the Biden Administration came to office, Washington has been full of reports that the United States and its Gulf allies are drifting apart. The core argument was that in order to deliver for the Democratic Party’s grassroots base, U.S. President Joe Biden would seek to pursue a foreign policy that prioritized American values over American interests. In such a policy turn, Gulf States would be adversely impacted as the U.S.-Gulf relations are much more about common interests than common values—such as political democracy, the issue of human or labor rights, etc.

    Why Khamenei is unlikely to pick his son to succeed him as Iran’s supreme leader
    Photo by Saeid Zareian/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Why Khamenei is unlikely to pick his son to succeed him as Iran’s supreme leader

    Amid the ongoing circus over efforts to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, two rumors have started to gain traction inside and outside Iran: Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is on his deathbed and preparations are being made for his son, Mojtaba, to succeed him.

    September 21, 2022

    The I2U2 needs an ambitious tech agenda
    Photo by MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The I2U2 needs an ambitious tech agenda

    Technology represents one potentially fruitful area where the I2U2 member states — Israel, India, the U.S. and the UAE — could cooperate together, expand their format to include more countries, deliver tangible results, and avoid agitating other global and regional powers.

    Two years on, what is the state of the Abraham Accords?
    Photo by Menahem KAHANA / AFP) (Photo by MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Two years on, what is the state of the Abraham Accords?

    Two years after the signing of the Abraham Accords, progress in developing relations between Israel and its Arab neighbors has achieved mixed results, opening up some greater cooperation in the security sphere but failing to change Arab publics’ minds due to the lack of movement on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    حياكة السجاد الإيراني شرق الفرات: رغم الرفض الشعبي جماعات إيرانية تزيد نفوذها في الحسكة
  • Commentary
  • حياكة السجاد الإيراني شرق الفرات: رغم الرفض الشعبي جماعات إيرانية تزيد نفوذها في الحسكة

    شهدت مدينة الحسكة شمال شرق سوريا يوم 22 أغسطس الحالي توزيعا لمنشورات وملصقات مناهضة للنفوذ الإيراني في المدينة، حيث ظهرت الملصقات في عدة مناطق حساسة وسط المدينة في المنطقة المعروفة بـ “المربع الأمني” التي تخضع لسيطرة جيش النظام السوري وميليشيات الدفاع الوطني التي أصبحت تخضع لنفوذ إيران.

    September 12, 2022

    “Carpet weaving” east of the Euphrates: Iranian proxy groups expand their influence in Syria’s Hasakah Province
    National Defense Commander Abdel Qader Hamo and behind him a picture of Ali Al-Yasiri, the leader of the concrete
  • Analysis
  • “Carpet weaving” east of the Euphrates: Iranian proxy groups expand their influence in Syria’s Hasakah Province

    On Aug. 22, the northeastern Syrian city of al-Hasakah was inundated with leaflets condemning creeping Iranian influence in the area. The printed messages were plastered around several highly sensitive locations in the city center, including the local branch of the Ba’ath Party, the neighborhoods of al-Matar and al-Mahatah, as well as near the Great Mosque and market streets.

    September 12, 2022

    Hospitable Thoughts: Saudi artist Abdulnasser Gharem’s New York show explores control and authority
    The Path; image courtesy of the artist.
  • Analysis
  • Hospitable Thoughts: Saudi artist Abdulnasser Gharem’s New York show explores control and authority

    When acclaimed Saudi artist Abdulnasser Gharem opened his first solo show in New York City last week, it closed the circle on a story that began more than two decades ago on Sept. 11, 2001, and the wars and chaos that followed. The 49-year-old Gharem, a seminal figure in and pioneer of Saudi Arabia’s contemporary art scene, hopes his exhibition Hospitable Thoughts, at the Marc Straus Gallery through Oct. 16, will spark a “new cultural dialogue.”

    September 12, 2022

    Is Iraq on the brink of a new civil war?
    Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Is Iraq on the brink of a new civil war?

    Followers of Iraqi Shi’a cleric and political leader Muqtada al-Sadr and those of the Iran-aligned Coordination Framework clashed in downtown Baghdad on Aug. 29. Iraqis spent that evening wondering whether the country was descending into an intra-Shi’a civil war.

    September 8, 2022

    Emirati-backed forces eye Yemen’s energy heartland
    Photo by SALEH AL-OBEIDI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Emirati-backed forces eye Yemen’s energy heartland

    The battle for control of the Yemeni heartland and its energy resources has reached a turning point. Yemen’s internationally recognized institutions are, once again, in crisis. In fact, the current infighting within the “government camp” threatens both the long-stalled implementation of the 2019 Riyadh Agreement and the political legitimacy of the newly-established Presidential Leadership Council.

    August 30, 2022

    Is a renewed JCPOA a threat to Israel?
    Photo by Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Is a renewed JCPOA a threat to Israel?

    The renewal of the international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program does not undermine Israeli national security per se but rather a longstanding tenet of Israel’s strategic thinking: that it must be able to fully eradicate any challenge to its military superiority deep inside enemy territory.

    August 26, 2022

    What Iran’s emerging demographic “tsunami” means for Tehran
    Photo by Eric Lafforgue/Art in All of Us/Corbis via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • What Iran’s emerging demographic “tsunami” means for Tehran

    Officials in the Islamic Republic of Iran have been warning about an emerging demographic “tsunami” as local and international forecasts suggest the country could have one of the five largest elderly populations by 2050. Nearly 11% of Iranians are now over 60 years old, and this figure could significantly increase going forward.

    August 25, 2022

    The diplomatic ice is breaking in the Gulf. What does that mean for the region?
    Photo by Iranian Presidency/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The diplomatic ice is breaking in the Gulf. What does that mean for the region?

    The announcements in mid-August that both the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait will be returning their ambassadors to Tehran after six years provided the latest indication that the diplomatic ice has started to break in the Gulf region.

    August 23, 2022