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The Kurdish Card: Can Iranian Kurds Shape the War’s Endgame?
  • Podcast
  • The Kurdish Card: Can Iranian Kurds Shape the War’s Endgame?

    The war against Iran has entered its third week with no clear endgame—and no clear strategy from Washington.
    At one point President Trump appeared to encourage Iranian Kurdish groups to rise up against the regime, before quickly walking it back. Meanwhile, some exiled Kurdish opposition figures say they already have an invasion plan and only need US air cover.
    The Kurdish question is once again at the center of regional politics. In this episode, we examine the role of Iranian Kurds in the opposition—and what this moment could mean for their future.
    If the Regime Survives: Iran War Raises the Ante for US, Israel
  • Analysis
  • If the Regime Survives: Iran War Raises the Ante for US, Israel

    The United States and Israel both hope for the grand prize: the emergence of a new regime in Iran to replace the Islamic Republic. For the US, this would close the chapter on a hostile and at times violent relationship that has endured since 1979. For Israel, this would see the end not only of a regime with a deep ideological commitment against it but also the foe that Israel sees as behind all fronts of the war it has fought since October 7, 2023.

    How the US and Israel Can Stave off Strategic Failure in Iran
    Photo by Henry NICHOLLS / AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • How the US and Israel Can Stave off Strategic Failure in Iran

    Despite a dazzling military onslaught, an Iranian regime that faces a threat to its very existence is demonstrating an entirely predictable willingness to stay the course at all costs. As things stand now, the joint US-Israeli war risks ending in military victory but becoming a strategic failure.

    Surviving October 7th: Amir Tibon on Trauma, War, and Israel’s Future
  • Podcast
  • Surviving October 7th: Amir Tibon on Trauma, War, and Israel’s Future

    Brian is joined by Amir Tibon, a journalist for Haaretz and the author of The Gates of Gaza: A Story of Betrayal, Survival, and Hope in Israel’s Borderlands and The Last Palestinian: The Rise and Reign of Mahmoud Abbas. On October 7, 2023, the Tibon family’s lives were changed forever when Hamas militants invaded Nahal Oz kibbutz, destroying their community, brutally killing their neighbors, and taking others hostage. Together, Brian and Amir examine the fallout from the events of October 7th, how public opinion in Israel and the United States has shifted over the past two and a half years, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s political strategy, and what this all means for the future of Israel and its relationship with Palestinians and the broader region.

    Shockwaves Across Asia: The Iran War’s Strategic Fallout
    Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Shockwaves Across Asia: The Iran War’s Strategic Fallout

    The Israeli-U.S. military strikes on Iran that began on February 28 have done more than ignite a Middle Eastern war. They have sent shockwaves rolling across Asia, from the Strait of Hormuz to the Sea of Japan, exposing the brittle underpinnings of regional energy systems, straining diplomatic balancing acts, and forcing governments to make hard choices they have long deferred.

    Can Turkey Stay Out of the Iran War?
  • Podcast
  • Can Turkey Stay Out of the Iran War?

    Nearly two weeks into the US and Israel’s war with Iran, MEI Senior Fellow Gönül Tol joins hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj to explore the impact of the widening regional conflict on Turkey. On March 9, Ankara announced that NATO air defenses shot down a second Iranian ballistic missile that had entered Turkish airspace since the start of the war and stated it would take all necessary defensive measures. Turkey is now caught in the middle of an escalating conflict that could pose risks to the country’s security, economy, and foreign policy. Tol, Taylor, and Czekaj discuss what a prolonged regional conflict could mean for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, his regional political objectives, and Turkey’s relationship with key Middle Eastern neighbors.

    March 12, 2026

    Why we must talk about Gaza now
    Photo by Saeed M. M. T. Jaras/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Why we must talk about Gaza now

    As the war with Iran consumes regional attention, Gaza is again being pushed aside. That is not just a humanitarian failure. It is a strategic mistake that could squander a rare opening for political transition while allowing Hamas to weaponize abandonment once more.

    Turkey caught in the vortex of a widening Iran war
    Photo by Mehmet Ali Ozcan/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Turkey caught in the vortex of a widening Iran war

    After months of trying to head off a US-Israeli war with Iran, Turkey now finds itself caught in the middle of it — and deeply concerned that a prolonged, regionalized conflict could pose serious security, economic, and political risks.

    Intelligence questions as the war with Iran enters a more uncertain phase
  • Analysis
  • Intelligence questions as the war with Iran enters a more uncertain phase

    Following the tactical surprise of US-Israeli strikes on Iran, a crucial next step is the assessment of judgments about Iranian military sustainability, regime cohesion, escalation dynamics, regional spillover, allied responses, and plausible end states, and how those judgments interact with allied positioning, diplomatic activity, and economic constraints.

    How to prevent the Iran war from becoming a vortex that draws in more countries
  • Analysis
  • How to prevent the Iran war from becoming a vortex that draws in more countries

    By attacking Iran without clear objectives or an exit strategy, the US and Israel turned what was the greatest strategic and chronic threat to regional security into an unpredictable set of imminent dangers. A fundamental task for US national security is to prevent this conflict from becoming a vortex that increasingly pulls in other powers.

    Disarmament as a Means, Not an End: A Practical Strategy for Gaza’s Governing Transition
  • Analysis
  • Disarmament as a Means, Not an End: A Practical Strategy for Gaza’s Governing Transition

    Disarmament is necessary in Gaza. It is the only way to realize the goals articulated in the internationally endorsed 20-point plan laid out by the Trump administration. But a policy approach that makes disarmament a prerequisite for action on governance, recovery, freedom of movement for Gazans, and any credible political horizon is structurally and strategically counterproductive.

    How Lebanon’s authorities can keep the Iran war from engulfing the country
    Photo by Nidal SOLH / AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • How Lebanon’s authorities can keep the Iran war from engulfing the country

    Today’s decision taken by the Lebanese government — to declare all of Hizballah’s security and military activities illegal — is a landmark development. But how the government and the Lebanese Armed Forces implement this directive now that a new round of attacks has actually taken place will be the ultimate test of their credibility.

    Tehran Has Discovered Moscow Is a Fair-Weather Friend
  • Commentary
  • Tehran Has Discovered Moscow Is a Fair-Weather Friend

    The latest cycle of U.S.-Iran escalation has followed a familiar script: sharpened rhetoric from the United States, calibrated military signaling by Iran in the Persian Gulf, indirect diplomacy through Oman, and Israeli warnings that remain deliberately ambiguous but unmistakably real. Yet beneath this choreography lies a more consequential development inside Tehran. The current crisis is forcing Iran’s political class to reassess its central foreign-policy wager of the past decade: that deepening alignment with Russia and China would provide strategic insulation against Western coercion.