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Looking to the skies: The growing interest in cloud seeding technology in the Gulf
Main Image Credit: Courtesy of NCMA/GN Archives
  • Analysis
  • Looking to the skies: The growing interest in cloud seeding technology in the Gulf

    In response to water shortages exacerbated by population growth and climate change, an increasing number of countries have invested in weather modification technologies over the past decade, including precipitation enhancement, or cloud seeding. The UAE has been a leader in exploring this technology within the arid Gulf region, launching a cloud seeding program in 2002.

    June 13, 2022

    Another blow for the unsteady Israeli coalition government
    Photo by GIL COHEN-MAGEN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Another blow for the unsteady Israeli coalition government

    On June 6 Israel’s coalition government lost an important vote, in which more than half of the Knesset members on both sides voted against their own most fundamental beliefs in a desperate effort to either bring down the coalition or to save it. The substance of the legislation was barely more than a pretext, but the opposition smelled blood and was willing to do virtually anything to regain power.

    June 7, 2022

    US-Saudi relations bend but don’t break
    Photo by FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • US-Saudi relations bend but don’t break

    Partnering is a practical necessity for both countries but need not come at the cost of abandoning core values. The U.S. continues to exercise significant leverage and its own interests are better served globally by demonstrating credibility in what it stands for and reliability in its commitments. The U.S.-Saudi relationship has ample room to bend before it risks breaking.

    June 6, 2022

    Can a new EU strategy bring EU and Gulf actors closer together?
    Photo by KARIM JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Can a new EU strategy bring EU and Gulf actors closer together?

    Relations between the EU and the Gulf countries have been on life support for a long time. The two sides have become experts at talking past each other, blithely skidding from crisis to crisis. But on May 18, the EU made the first serious effort in a long time to bridge this gap, by introducing a proposal for a “Strategic Partnership with the Gulf.”

    June 1, 2022

    A false alarm or a wake-up call for Israel’s fragile coalition?
    Photo by AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • A false alarm or a wake-up call for Israel’s fragile coalition?

    On May 19, Ghaida Rinawi Zoabi, one of Meretz’s two Arab Knesset members, announced she was leaving the governing coalition and her party. On May 22, however, it was announced that she had rejoined both. What happened and what does it tell us about the state of Israel’s fragile coalition government?

    May 25, 2022

    Protecting Gulf waters through regional cooperation
    (Photo by Hussain Altareef/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Protecting Gulf waters through regional cooperation

    In collaboration with regional and international experts and organizations, the Middle East Institute is implementing a program aimed at promoting regional approaches to solve climactic and anthropogenic challenges to the waters of the Gulf.

    May 24, 2022

    The Palestinian Authority’s economic “disengagement” looks a lot like the status quo
    Photo by Palestinian Prime Minister's Office / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Palestinian Authority’s economic “disengagement” looks a lot like the status quo

    Palestinian Authority (PA) officials repeatedly deny acquiescing to the economic peace model with Israel, but such rhetoric is not reflected in their actions. In recent years integration between the Palestinian and Israeli economies has only deepened.

    May 24, 2022

    “Half of us were left behind while one of our colleagues back home was shot dead”
    Photo courtesy of the author
  • Commentary
  • “Half of us were left behind while one of our colleagues back home was shot dead”

    There are certain events that are so impactful that you remember exactly where you were and what you were doing when you heard about them. The killing of Shireen Abu Akleh, the veteran Al Jazeera journalist, last Wednesday in the occupied West Bank was for me just such an event — both because of who she was and what I was doing at the time. 

    May 19, 2022

    Monday Briefing: Lebanese elections bring change
  • Commentary
  • Monday Briefing: Lebanese elections bring change

    Read MEI’s weekly briefing featuring expert analysis of key regional developments for the week ahead.

    May 16, 2022

    From rivalry to partnership: Managing climate risks through regional collaboration
    Photo by Bestami Bodruk/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • From rivalry to partnership: Managing climate risks through regional collaboration

    Countries across the region face similar climate risks and impacts, but tensions and socio-economic challenges have hampered regional collaboration and collective efforts to tackle climate change. One way to address this problem and to circumvent poor policy coordination is through technical research and knowledge-sharing.

    The Dorra Field: Global gas market impact or bellwether for regional relations?
    Photo by Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Dorra Field: Global gas market impact or bellwether for regional relations?

    The Dorra Gas Field, located in shallow waters offshore in the northern Arabian Gulf, lies at the junction of competing territorial claims by Kuwait, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. With the growing gas demand in these countries, any production will be absorbed into the domestic network and the impact of production on the global gas and LNG market will be insignificant. However, the development of the field, if it occurs, may serve as a bellwether for regional relations.

    May 13, 2022

    Five things the United States knew about the Nakba as it unfolded
    Photo by George Nemeh (CC BY-SA 3.0 License). Pictures From History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • Five things the United States knew about the Nakba as it unfolded

    An estimated 750,000 Palestinians were either driven from their homes or fled during the Nakba in 1948. To counter attempts at Nakba denial and “memoricide” by U.S. politicians and others, it is instructive to review the archives of U.S. diplomats stationed in Palestine and surrounding Arab countries who witnessed the Nakba unfold and reported back on the magnitude and gravity of Israel’s dispossession of Palestine’s indigenous inhabitants.

    May 13, 2022