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Breaking News Brief: Damascus and the Syrian Kurds Come to Blows
  • Podcast
  • Breaking News Brief: Damascus and the Syrian Kurds Come to Blows

    MEI Senior Fellow Charles Lister joins hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj to unpack the latest developments in Syria, as a tenuous cease-fire takes hold after several days of intense fighting between the Syrian army and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). Their discussion explores the drivers of the conflict, the prospects for a lasting deal that would integrate the SDF into the Syrian military, as well as the role and perspective of key external actors, including the US, Turkey, and Israel.

    January 20, 2026

    What Ankara sees in Riyadh — and why it still needs Abu Dhabi
    Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • What Ankara sees in Riyadh — and why it still needs Abu Dhabi

    As the rivalry between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi sharpens in Yemen and beyond, Turkey has begun edging closer to Saudi Arabia, sparking claims that a new regional order is taking shape: a Turkey-Saudi axis backed by a NATO-like defense architecture, implicitly aligned against Israel and the United Arab Emirates. This reading overstates the case.

    Potential US military strikes on Iran: This won’t be another 12-Day War
    Photo by Zachary Pearson- U.S. Navy via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Potential US military strikes on Iran: This won’t be another 12-Day War

    President Donald Trump has sharply warned the Iranian regime to halt its brutal crackdown on protesters. Amid speculation that the US is preparing for military action in Iran, Washington should take the lessons and fundamentally different context of its successful June 2025 operation against the Islamic Republic into account as it plans for how to respond.

    How Damascus and the SDF came to blows in Aleppo — and what might come next
  • Analysis
  • How Damascus and the SDF came to blows in Aleppo — and what might come next

    After months of building tensions, full-blown hostilities erupted between Syria’s transitional government and militia fighters linked to the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in Aleppo on January 6. Through four days of fighting, government forces have now assumed full control of Syria’s second city, after expelling SDF-linked forces from its northwestern districts.

    From coalition to confrontation: Saudi-UAE rivalry in Yemen and its regional implications
  • Analysis
  • From coalition to confrontation: Saudi-UAE rivalry in Yemen and its regional implications

    The final days of 2025 marked a turning point in the Middle East, as competition between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in Yemen spilled out into the open. Tensions between the two coalition partners, which jointly launched a military intervention in Yemen in 2015, have simmered for years and are now rapidly escalating, with far-reaching implications for both Yemen and regional security more broadly.

    Iran’s Axis of Resistance after the 12-day war: Adaptation, restructuring, and reconstitution
    Photo by Kaveh Kazemi/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran’s Axis of Resistance after the 12-day war: Adaptation, restructuring, and reconstitution

    Since Israel’s 12-day war against Iran, Tehran and its network of regional proxies and non-state allies, the so-called Axis of Resistance, have entered a phase of strategic dormancy — an outward calm concealing rearmament, financial adaptation, and ideological renewal.

    December 19, 2025

    Rob Malley Argues Two States Is an Illusion
  • Podcast
  • Rob Malley Argues Two States Is an Illusion

    Brian sits down with Robert Malley, a former US official best known for his role as the lead negotiator of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. Malley discusses the motivations behind his new book, Tomorrow Is Yesterday: Life, Death, and the Pursuit of Peace in Israel/Palestine, and offers his assessment of American perspectives on the war in Gaza. The conversation also explores his personal background as the son​ of an Egyptian Jewish father and an American Jewish mother—both outspoken on the political left—and how that upbringing shaped his worldview, alongside a career spanning the Clinton, Obama, and Biden administrations.

     

    How Iraq’s vote will shape the next phase of US-Iran competition
    Photo by Ameer Al-Mohammedawi/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • How Iraq’s vote will shape the next phase of US-Iran competition

    For Iran, Iraq is strategic depth, political sanctuary, and economic lifeline all at once. The results of the November 11 Iraqi elections will decide who in Baghdad controls the budgetary levers, internal security appointments, and committees that could codify, or constrain, Iraq’s Iran-backed militias.

    Will Syria join the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS?
    US Army photo by Sgt. Julio Hernandez courtesy of CENTCOM
  • Analysis
  • Will Syria join the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS?

    The joint al-Dumayr operation in mid-October was the fifth instance of coordination between the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS and the Syrian government to confront the Islamic State, amid Western calls for Damascus to officially join the international effort. What’s at stake and what are the potential scenarios moving forward?

    October 27, 2025

    Has Pakistan agreed to use nuclear force to defend Saudi Arabia?
  • Video
  • Has Pakistan agreed to use nuclear force to defend Saudi Arabia?

    Saudi Arabia and Pakistan signed a mutual defense pact on September 17, 2025, declaring that “any aggression against either country shall be considered an aggression against both.” The wording of the agreement sparked speculation that Pakistan might use its nuclear capabilities to defend Saudi Arabia. MEI’s F. Gregory Gause contends otherwise, offering insight into the history and strategic calculations driving the deal. To learn more about the deal, visit our website.

    Pakistan’s strategic defense pact with Saudi Arabia: A new security architecture in the wider Middle East
    Photo via Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan’s strategic defense pact with Saudi Arabia: A new security architecture in the wider Middle East

    Following Israel’s September 9 strike on Hamas targets in Qatar, Pakistan has taken swift and significant foreign policy steps in response and adopted an unusually assertive stance. This shift was largely influenced by Pakistan’s military chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir. The latter is determined to enhance his country’s strategic autonomy and diplomatic leverage in an increasingly complex international environment by positioning Pakistan as a key security actor and an emerging middle power on the global stage.

    Silent leverage, quiet gains? China and the Saudi-Pakistan defense pact
    Photo by Madoka Ikegami-Pool/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Silent leverage, quiet gains? China and the Saudi-Pakistan defense pact

    The Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement (SMDA) between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, signed in Riyadh on September 17, is far more than a bilateral pledge. It represents a profound reordering of alignments in the Gulf and South Asia, reflecting and reinforcing the broader erosion of US preeminence in the Eurasian security architecture. While much of the initial commentary centered on the striking commitment of a wealthy Gulf monarchy to the defense of a nuclear-armed South Asian state, as well as the question of whether Pakistan had in fact extended its nuclear umbrella to Saudi Arabia, the deeper story is arguably China’s potential advance.

    A Middle East NATO? Regional Security Options After Doha
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • A Middle East NATO? Regional Security Options After Doha

    Israel’s September 9 strike on Hamas leaders in Doha rattled Gulf capitals and revived a decades-old debate over whether the region needs a NATO-style defensive alliance. MEI Senior Fellow Jason Campbell joins hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj to unpack why past attempts at collective defense have fallen short, whether this moment is different, and what the crisis means for US security strategy in the Middle East.

    September 25, 2025

    Israel’s Doha strike could further destabilize region, undermine US security partnerships
    Photo by JACQUELINE PENNEY/AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Israel’s Doha strike could further destabilize region, undermine US security partnerships

    The reverberations of Israel’s strike on the Hamas negotiating team in Doha yesterday are still rippling across the globe and will continue to for the foreseeable future. Its ramifications are profound and will alter the geopolitical landscape not just in the Middle East but likely on a global scale.