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Russia’s military police face their toughest challenge yet in north Syria
TOPSHOT - Russian military police members stand outside an armoured personnel carrier (APC) along a road in the countryside near the northeastern Syrian town of Amuda in Hasakeh province on October 24, 2019, as part of a joint patrol between Russian forces and Syrian Kurdish Asayish internal security forces near the border with Turkey. - Russian forces have started patrols along the flashpoint frontier, filling the vacuum left by a US troop withdrawal that effectively returned a third of the country to the
  • Analysis
  • Russia’s military police face their toughest challenge yet in north Syria

    Russia’s ability to control the pace and scope of developments in Syria has been a moving target ever since its intervention four years ago. At varying times, Moscow has found itself both firmly in the driver’s seat and a helpless bystander — the latter most vividly illustrated by events such as the regular Israeli airstrikes on Russia’s Iranian and Syrian regime allies.

    November 21, 2019

    Return to the northeast: Syrian Army deployments against Turkish forces
    Syrian government soldiers climb up a wooden pole with a Syrian government national flag while deploying for the first time in the eastern countryside of the city of Qamishli in the northeastern Hasakah province on November 5, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • Return to the northeast: Syrian Army deployments against Turkish forces

    In mid-October, five years after it was expelled from most of eastern Syria as ISIS swept in, the Syrian Arab Army (SAA) returned to much of the northeast as part of a deal between the Syrian Democratic Forces and Damascus struck just days after Turkey launched an offensive against the region. By examining the distribution and make-up of units sent to the northeast we can better understand the strength of the SAA in the region and the current state of its broader deployments across the country.

    November 20, 2019

    Lebanon protests enter their second month amid stalemate and uncertainty
    Lebanese students wave the national flag and chant slogans as they gather outside the Ministry of Education and Higher Education during ongoing anti-government protests, in the capital Beirut on November 8, 2019.
  • Commentary
  • Lebanon protests enter their second month amid stalemate and uncertainty

    In Lebanon, the protests have entered their second month with contending parties stuck in a stalemate that is not hurting enough to incentivize concessions from any party. Ruling elites are at a loss what to do.

    November 18, 2019

    Despair and Decay: East Ghouta After 18 Months of Renewed Regime Rule
    Syrian children ride their bike past destroyed buildings in the former rebel-held town of Zamalka, in Eastern Ghouta on April 5, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / STRINGER (Photo credit should read STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • Despair and Decay: East Ghouta After 18 Months of Renewed Regime Rule

    East Ghouta is perhaps the darkest example of renewed Assad regime rule over former opposition territory. 18 months after the regime recaptured the area, its security forces and intelligence apparatus continue to terrorize Syrians there. Night-time raids on homes, mass arrests, and forced disappearances are common occurrences across the region. Intelligence forces assert themselves in every aspect of daily life, especially at the ubiquitous checkpoints where personnel extort residents for bribes when they pass, subjecting them to security checks that can lead to civilians either being arrested on the spot or conscripted into military service. In addition, residents of East Ghouta are facing a humanitarian crisis amid a total lack of basic services, from sewage to schools and hospitals, and the basic pillars of the local economy remain in total disrepair.

    November 14, 2019

    Nadine Labaki receives 2019 Issam M. Fares Award for Excellence
  • Video
  • Nadine Labaki receives 2019 Issam M. Fares Award for Excellence

    Oscar-nominated Lebanese film director Nadine Labaki received the 2019 Issam M. Fares Award for Excellence at MEI’s 73rd Annual Awards Gala on November 12 in Washington, DC.

    November 13, 2019

    Syria tops the agenda as Erdogan heads to Washington
    US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as he arrives for meetings at the White House in Washington, DC, May 16, 2017.
  • Commentary
  • Syria tops the agenda as Erdogan heads to Washington

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is set to meet with his U.S. counterpart, Donald Trump, in Washington on Wednesday. While there are doubtless other items for discussion on the agenda, at the top of the list is, at least on Turkey’s side, Syria — or more specifically, what U.S. policy is and should be in Syria.

    November 11, 2019

    Lebanon’s revolution will be deeper and longer
    People gather stage an anti government protest in Beirut, Lebanon on November 10, 2019.
  • Commentary
  • Lebanon’s revolution will be deeper and longer

    Lebanon’s popular uprising seems to be moving into a long and painful standoff between, on the one hand, a new generation along with a wide spectrum of the population demanding wholesale accountability and profound change, and on the other a ruling class mired in an interdependent web of corruption, intent on protecting its interests and waiting out the populace.

    November 11, 2019

    Perpetual Identities: Interview with Katya Traboulsi
  • Podcast
  • Perpetual Identities: Interview with Katya Traboulsi

    Lebanese artist Katya Traboulsi joins guest host Lyne Sneige to discuss her art exhibition, Perpetual Identities, which consists of 22 hand-crafted replicas of bombshells used in the Lebanese civil war, each adorned with designs and iconography associated with the artistic traditions of 22 featured countries. 

    November 7, 2019

    Washington Should Back, Not Punish, the Lebanese Military
  • Analysis
  • Washington Should Back, Not Punish, the Lebanese Military

    With ongoing protests, potential sectarian clashes, and threats of terrorism in the region looming, the country’s armed forces need propping up now more than ever.

    November 5, 2019

    Women and women’s rights are central to Lebanon’s protest movement
    BEIRUT, LEBANON - NOVEMBER 03: People gather at Bechara El-Khoury Avenue to call protesters for them to continue the demonstrations until a new government formed as they march from Martyrs Square and Riyadh al-Solh Square in Beirut, Lebanon on November 03, 2019. (Photo by Mahmut Geldi/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • Women and women’s rights are central to Lebanon’s protest movement

    On Oct. 29, Prime Minister Saad Hariri submitted his resignation and that of the government, a move that has been hailed as an important victory for the protestors who have taken to the streets across the country for nearly three weeks now. Heralded as al-thawra, or revolution in Arabic, Lebanon is witnessing the rise of an inclusive, decentralized, and grassroots movement that transcends geography, sect, and traditional loyalties to political dynasties and parties.

    Syria: The most important issues are not yet on the table in Geneva
     Syrian Constitutional Committe, made up of opposition, civil society and regime members gather in Geneva, Switzerland on October 30, 2019 with the UN's facilitation.
  • Commentary
  • Syria: The most important issues are not yet on the table in Geneva

    If the Syrian Constitutional Committee does not address the oppressive security and military apparatus, which are the primary root causes of the Syrian crisis, then its work will not actually effect change in Syria — and so far, reforms of those two sectors are not yet on the table.

    November 4, 2019

    Political upheaval in Lebanon and Iraq
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Political upheaval in Lebanon and Iraq

    MEI’s Paul Salem and Randa Slim join host Alistair Taylor to discuss the nationwide protests that have swept through Lebanon and Iraq this week resulting in political and economic turmoil as well as crackdowns by security forces. Where do things go from here?

    October 31, 2019

    The US has a partner in eastern Syria — provided it has the will
    A US military convoy drives on a highway from Kobane to Ain Issa on September 29, 2017. After a months-long campaign, the Syrian Democratic Forces -- a US-backed alliance of Arab and Kurdish fighters -- have cornered diehard jihadists in a pocket of territory in the battered northern city of Raqa. / AFP PHOTO / BULENT KILIC (Photo credit should read BULENT KILIC/AFP/Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • The US has a partner in eastern Syria — provided it has the will

    The Trump administration inherited a number of complex problems in the Syrian file from its predecessors in the White House. In dealing with the Syrian crisis, the Obama administration had three main priorities: not disturbing Iran in Syria during the process of nuclear negotiations, working with Russia toward a ceasefire in various parts of Syria (without trusting that Russia could deliver or should have the upper hand), and, most importantly, carrying out a limited military intervention in the northeast to defeat ISIS — an issue it considered separately from the Syrian crisis.

    October 29, 2019