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'Ali Khamene'i: Iran's Most Powerful Man
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • 'Ali Khamene'i: Iran's Most Powerful Man

    Originally posted March 2008

    On January 3, 2008, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah ‘Ali Khamene’i once again sought to remind domestic and foreign audiences about his stature in Tehran. Stating that “cutting off relations with the US” was one of the “principal policies” of the Iranian government, but that he would be the “first person to endorse these relations” if it benefited the Iranian people, Khamene’i secured news headlines.[1]     

    Introducation to Iran's March 14, 2008 Majlis Elections
  • Analysis
  • Introducation to Iran's March 14, 2008 Majlis Elections

    Speaking of the need for an opposition party, Kemal Ataturk once said: “I do not want to be recorded in history as the man who bequeathed a tyranny.” These words could also be uttered by Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah ‘Ali Khamene’i. Yet, the legacy that ‘Ali Khamene’i will leave behind can perhaps best be described as a promenade of contradictory truths. Such contradictions are emblematic of the 8th round of Iranian parliamentary (Majlis) elections that are now upon us. It is true that the Iranian state employs a prodigious style of electoral engineering to regiment outcomes.

    March 1, 2008

    In the Shadow of Benazir Part 1
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • In the Shadow of Benazir Part 1

    Originally posted February 2008

    Pakistan has had so few national elections in its 60-year history that every exercise to elect the national Parliament is exceptional. These relatively rare events are not only a mechanism for effecting a change of government but are also a means for putting the political process back on the rails and redefining the provisions of the 1973 constitution, which has been shredded by four periods of martial law. General (retired) Pervez Musharraf has declared martial law twice, ironically once against his own government.

    February 2, 2008

    In the Shadow of Benazir Part 2
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • In the Shadow of Benazir Part 2

    Originally posted in February 2008

    Pakistan faces a paradox. Most political observers believe that Pakistan urgently needs free, fair, and transparent elections, but none is convinced that the elections would usher in an era of participatory governance, internal harmony, and stability in the country.

    February 2, 2008

    Democratization in Morocco: Political Transition of a North African Kingdom
  • Analysis
  • Democratization in Morocco: Political Transition of a North African Kingdom

    Mounia was in the midst of her PowerPoint presentation, held in the seminar room opposite the office of the Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences (SHSS) at al-Akhawayn University in Ifrane (AUI).  It was the last week of the Spring 2000 semester, the last meeting of the Capstone seminar on “Contemporary Morocco,” that Mounia, like all graduating seniors of the SHSS, had to pass in order to get her B.A.

    February 1, 2008

    After Annapolis…
  • Analysis
  • After Annapolis…

    Many Americans, Israelis, and Palestinians are convinced that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is intractable because neither side has abandoned the goal of defeating the other, and neither really believes in compromise. This is a myth.

    January 9, 2008

    American Task Force on Palestine
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • American Task Force on Palestine

    Originally posted January 2008

    Even the most skeptical of us would have to concede that things are better now than they were a few months ago, as they hasten to add that we have been here before and that this too shall pass.

    Yes, things are better: Palestinian and Israeli officials are talking, and not about the weather.  Final status issues are being discussed, though they are not being resolved.

    January 2, 2008

    Americans for Peace Now
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Americans for Peace Now

    Originally published in January 2008

    Last month, I spent seven days in an Israeli living room, sitting “shiva” with my family to mourn the loss of a relative. Hundreds of people came to visit. Hundreds of conversations unfolded on almost any topic imaginable. One of the purposes of the shiva is to distract mourners from their loss through engagement with the living in conversations on the mundane.

    January 2, 2008

    Currency Conundrums in the Gulf
  • Analysis
  • Currency Conundrums in the Gulf

    Originally posted January 2008

    “In the past week Iran’s president, Mahmud Ahmadinejad, has damned it as a ‘worthless piece of paper’ and China’s premier, Wen Jiabao, has moaned that it is causing his country ‘big pressure’. The dollar’s relentless decline—it hit a new low of $1.49 against the euro on November 21st—is prompting jibes from America’s critics, jangling investors’ nerves and giving policymakers headaches.”[1]

    January 1, 2008