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The way forward in Lebanon
Photo by ANWAR AMRO/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The way forward in Lebanon

    The election of President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam is a political breakthrough in Lebanon and a harbinger of what could happen in a country long dismissed as unsalvageable. Beirut’s new leadership reflects the aspiration of a majority of the Lebanese people to live in a functioning state free from the dual drivers of its failure: political violence and pervasive corruption. Those leaders must now deliver on their commitment to establish a state committed and accountable to its people and rise to meet the responsibility that comes with holding the promise of a nation’s future.

    With election of nationalist president, Lebanon moves to exit the Axis of Resistance
    Photo by Bilal Jawich/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • With election of nationalist president, Lebanon moves to exit the Axis of Resistance

    With a nearly unanimous 99 out of 128 votes, the Lebanese parliament elected the head of the army, Gen. Joseph Aoun, as Lebanon’s 14th president on Jan. 9. In a strong inaugural speech Aoun laid out an ambitious agenda premised on regaining the Lebanese state’s monopoly of the use of force, securing the country’s borders and ports, strengthening the rule of law, and encouraging a raft of long-overdue reforms.

    January 10, 2025

    A different Middle East: How should Washington respond?
    Photo by Emin Sansar/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • A different Middle East: How should Washington respond?

    A very different Middle East will greet President-elect Trump this month compared to the region he experienced during his first term. However, there are opportunities to advance American interests for a more stable and less conflictual Middle East, which might not require the kind of intense US commitment we have seen over the last quarter-century.

    Weekly Briefing: Syria reignites
    Photo by AAREF WATAD/AFP via Getty Image
  • Commentary
  • Weekly Briefing: Syria reignites

    In only six days, a broad coalition of advancing opposition forces coordinated by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham has captured all of Idlib province, almost all of Aleppo province, and a sizeable stretch of northern Hama — a humiliating defeat for Bashar al-Assad and illustrative of the fragility of regime rule in Syria.

    Lebanon's maze to opportunity
  • Commentary
  • Lebanon's maze to opportunity

    Putting Lebanon back on the path of statehood and economic recovery is not only an urgent necessity for the Lebanese but also a step toward building a more peaceful and prosperous Middle East

    December 1, 2024

    Why a ceasefire in Lebanon gives me hope
  • Commentary
  • Why a ceasefire in Lebanon gives me hope

    Last week, as I made my way to Beirut airport, I drove through bombed out streets in an empty city. The Lebanese national airline still bravely flew in and out, its planes weaving their way between Israeli airstrikes. I boarded my flight to attend a conference, hoping we would make it out safely. I left behind a population that had paid a very heavy price for 13 months of war between the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and Israel: thousands of dead and injured, thousands of homes and businesses destroyed, and over 1.2 million displaced.

    November 27, 2024

    Weekly Briefing: A cease-fire for Thanksgiving?
  • Commentary
  • Weekly Briefing: A cease-fire for Thanksgiving?

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

    November 26, 2024

    US success in Iraq means being a more reliable partner than Iran
    Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • US success in Iraq means being a more reliable partner than Iran

    There is no quick path to limiting or reducing Iranian influence in Iraq. Tehran will react fiercely to American efforts to destroy the militias and zero-out its influence, and it would have multiple avenues to escalate through the porous 900-mile-long border between the two countries. Moreover, domestic Iraqi reaction, especially among elements of the Shi’a population, would be reticent at best and hostile at worst to intensified American military actions. Nor should it be an American goal to stoke a civil war among Iraq’s Shi’a that would give Iran new access points.

    Assad and Hezbollah hunker down in Syria
    Photo by LOUAI BESHARA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Assad and Hezbollah hunker down in Syria

    The Middle East has experienced an extraordinarily tumultuous year, as the ripples from Hamas’ assault on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, continue to fuel hostilities in Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and the waters of the Gulf. Amid all of this, Syria has received very little attention, despite its central role in Iran’s regional agenda. Now the Biden administration is reportedly “hopeful” that Bashar al-Assad will soon permanently block Iran’s ability to support Hezbollah in Lebanon and is postured to reward Damascus for doing so. At best, such calculations should be described as optimistic; at worst, fanciful.

    A Glimmer of Hope in a Time of War: The Beirut Museum of Art’s Mission to Heal and Regenerate Lebanon Through Art
    Nuhad es-Said Pavilion for Culture, Beirut Museum of Art
  • Arts & Culture
  • A Glimmer of Hope in a Time of War: The Beirut Museum of Art’s Mission to Heal and Regenerate Lebanon Through Art

    Amid the ongoing calamity of war in Lebanon, the country’s cultural scene is determined to work against the odds to keep its heritage and art alive. Among the many projects that are determined to push ahead is the Beirut Museum of Art (BeMA), a museum long in the works whose mission is to preserve the country’s heritage and culture through modern and contemporary art.

    November 14, 2024

    The Middle East’s changing strategic landscape
    Photo by Uriel Sinai/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Middle East’s changing strategic landscape

    The multiple wars that have erupted since Oct. 7, 2023, have already changed the strategic landscape in the Middle East — and more change is likely to follow.

    November 7, 2024

    Assad’s economic fragility exposed by Israel’s war on Lebanon
    Photo by Louai Beshara/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Assad’s economic fragility exposed by Israel’s war on Lebanon

    Israel’s escalation of its military campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon has severely disrupted the cross-border flow of goods into Syria that have long served as a critical lifeline for Damascus. These interruptions have worsened existing shortages, triggering sharp increases in the prices of essential commodities for Syrian who were already struggling economically.

    October 30, 2024