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A Lot Depends on Your Priorities
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • A Lot Depends on Your Priorities

    Senator John McCain was uncharacteristically subdued in a key note address yesterday to the Middle East Institute/Institute of Turkish Studies conference on Turkey.  He prodded President Obama to be more outspoken in denouncing the Assad regime and advocated a “safe zone” inside Syria along the Turkish border, but only in response to a question. He discounted the likelihood of NATO action, which the Europeans oppose, and suggested that the U.S. and Turkey should form the core of a coalition of the willing to support the Syrian opposition with arms and training.

    June 28, 2012

    A rebuttal to "Trafficking in Antiquities in a Time of War," and a reply by the author.
  • Analysis
  • A rebuttal to "Trafficking in Antiquities in a Time of War," and a reply by the author.

    Rebuttal to “Trafficking in Antiquities during a Time of War

    Bruce Richardson raises an important issue regarding the protection, trafficking, and exploitation of cultural patrimony. Aspects of this issue range across research, polemics, and litigation in attempts to document loss, return treasures, or on the other hand prevent restitution or repatriation. Richardson properly decries cultural looting, but we must distinguish among causes to reach agreement on protective steps.

    June 27, 2012

    The Afghanistan Stabilisation Program (ASP): A National Program to Improve Security and Governance
  • Analysis
  • The Afghanistan Stabilisation Program (ASP): A National Program to Improve Security and Governance

    Since the coup in April of 1978 by the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), the social, cultural, political, economic, governance, and security fabric of Afghanistan’s institutions have been destroyed by the subsequent Mujahedin and Taleban regimes. It is impossible to have enduring peace, stability, and development in a country without a strong institutional foundation. After 33 years of war and instability, for the most part, the linkages between central, provincial, district, and village governance structures in Afghanistan are either very weak or non-existent.

    June 20, 2012

    Gulf Union Might Do More Harm Than Good
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Gulf Union Might Do More Harm Than Good

    This Opinion first appeared on CNN.com’s “Global Public Square” blog on June 20, 2012

    Ever since Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah proposed forming a political federation among the six members of the Gulf Cooperation Council, the pros and cons have been fiercely debated across the Middle East.

    June 20, 2012

    The Dearth of Qatari Men in Higher Education: Reasons and Implications
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Dearth of Qatari Men in Higher Education: Reasons and Implications

    Originally posted October 2010

    That education is a major force for socialization is indisputable. Education has the power to shape views of the world, to challenge long-held beliefs, and, therefore, to impact the social order. Its influences on the course of a society’s development are far-reaching, from the public realm of employment patterns and economic development to the private sphere of marriage and childbearing.

    June 20, 2012

    Saudi Arabia Moves Closer to A New Generation of Leaders
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia Moves Closer to A New Generation of Leaders

    This Opinion first appeared in Al-Monitor on June 16, 2012

    The death Saturday (June 16) of Saudi Crown Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz is likely to have little short-term impact on the economic or political life of the kingdom or on its international relations. But it does accelerate the inevitable transition to a new generation of rulers who may have very different ideas about how the al-Saud should rule their people, deal with their neighbors and manage the critical relationship with the United States.

    June 18, 2012

    Pakistan's Military Holds the Keys to a Thaw with the U.S.
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan's Military Holds the Keys to a Thaw with the U.S.

    This Opinion first appeared in the the National on June 15, 2012

    Just when U.S.-Pakistan relations appear to have reached a new low, yet another event drives them lower still, further complicating chances of stabilising bilateral ties.

    Over the last 18 months, the deterioration of relations has been punctuated by a series of incidents, most dramatically the May 2011 raid that killed Osama bin Laden and the U.S. air strike last November at Salala, in which 24 Pakistani solders died.

    America's Catch-22: The Iran Question in Afghanistan
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • America's Catch-22: The Iran Question in Afghanistan

    This Opinion first appeared in Frontline.com’s Tehran Bureau on June 13, 2012 and was co-authored by Christina Lin

    As U.S. and other NATO troops prepare to leave Afghanistan in 2014, a geopolitical realignment will be under way in Southwest Asia. One possible scenario would outright undermine a principle U.S. policy objective in the region: the containment of Iran.

    Japan’s New Energy Future and the Middle East
  • Analysis
  • Japan’s New Energy Future and the Middle East

    On March 11, 2011 Japan was struck by a massive earthquake and tsunami that devastated the northeastern part of the country. The quake and tsunami also damaged three reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, triggering a nuclear crisis that led to the shutdown of nearly a third of the country’s energy production.

    Trafficking in Antiquities during a Time of War
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Trafficking in Antiquities during a Time of War

    When Russian archaeologist Viktor Sarianidi excavated Tilya Tepe in 1978, 21,000 bejeweled, gold artifacts created during the Greco-Bactrian era known as The Golden Hoard of Bactria were reported as inventoried, photographed, and catalogued. But in consideration of the time (1978), and the fact that the Kremlin was considering military intervention in Afghanistan in support of the Communist regime, it seems prudent to challenge the veracity of Professor Sarianidi’s findings.

    June 5, 2012

    What the Hell Should We Do About Syria?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • What the Hell Should We Do About Syria?

    This Opinion first appeared in Foreign Policy on May 30, 2012

    The massacre in al-Houla, where Syrian military forces and allied militiamen massacred more than 100 civilians in cold blood, leaves no doubt about the intentions of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime: survival at any cost and through any means. Assad does not have a Plan B.

    May 31, 2012

    Turkey Cozies Up to the KRG
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Turkey Cozies Up to the KRG

    Turkey’s popular and outspoken Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was treated to a hero’s welcome last week when he met with Syrian refugees for the first time since Turkey opened its doors to the thousands of people fleeing Bashar Al-Assad’s crackdown.  Erdogan’s pledge to defend the rights of the Syrian people and his call for Assad’s removal, however, fell short of expectations.  Although Erdogan’s speech drew some applause, it was also interrupted by shouts of “We want arms for the Free Syrian Army and a buffer zone inside Syria!”   The Turkish PM’s reiteration of his previous positi

    Egyptian Voters Flex Their Cheops
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Egyptian Voters Flex Their Cheops

    The cacophony of bullhorns, fireworks and frenzied cross-country barnstorming in trucks, busses and three-wheeled “tuk-tuks” emblazoned with candidates’ posters has come to an end, and a historic moment has arrived: tens of millions of Egyptians are heading to the polls today in the first democratic presidential election in the country’s history, an election borne out of the 2011 revolution that ousted former President Hosni Mubarak and injected Egyptians with a novel feeling of excitement for participatory democracy.

    May 23, 2012