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History rewrite: Did Saddam try to kill Bush?
Photo by Diana Walker/Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • History rewrite: Did Saddam try to kill Bush?

    In his new book, Steve Coll casts doubt on whether Iraqi intelligence had actually tried to assassinate former President George H. W. Bush in Kuwait in April 1993. If the Kuwait plot were a fabrication, it would fit yet another brick in the wall of many well documented falsehoods and misunderstandings that led to the US invasion. Unfortunately for that allegation, the plot was very likely to have been quite real.

    March 5, 2024

    Maintaining the best thing the US built in Iraq: Continued support to the Iraqi Counterterrorism Service
    Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Maintaining the best thing the US built in Iraq: Continued support to the Iraqi Counterterrorism Service

    As the US engages in a dialogue with the Iraqi government over the future of the coalition forces combating the Islamic State, Washington must ensure a continued relationship between the US Special Operations Forces and the Iraqi Counterterrorism Service.

    “Exporting its internal problems”: Understanding Iran’s January missile salvos against its neighbors
    Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • “Exporting its internal problems”: Understanding Iran’s January missile salvos against its neighbors

    In mid-January, with the war in Gaza continuing to rage on, Iran launched a series of surprise missile attacks on its immediate neighbors Iraq, Syria, and Pakistan over two days. Taken together, these attacks illustrate that the Islamic Republic puts regime survival above national interest in its foreign policy calculations, which undermines its efforts to engender solidarity and good relations with other Muslim-majority states in the region.

    February 23, 2024

    What’s next for Pakistan after election shock?
  • Podcast
  • What’s next for Pakistan after election shock?

    On this week’s episode Tamkinet Karim, Syed Mohammad Ali, and Alistair Taylor discuss the results of Pakistan’s Feb. 8 elections and where things might be headed moving forward. Over the past two years, Pakistan has gone through a particularly turbulent period, following the removal of Imran Khan’s government in a no-confidence vote in April 2022 — a time marked by political instability, intense polarization, a worsening economic crisis, and growing threats to internal security.

    February 21, 2024

    Pakistan’s election and what’s next?
    Photo by AAMIR QURESHI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan’s election and what’s next?

    Contrary to what many political observers predicted, Pakistan’s general election on Feb. 8 delivered many surprises and ushered in an even higher level of political uncertainty than what already prevailed. And with the current formation of the new coalition government, an end to political volatility doesn’t seem to be in sight.

    February 21, 2024

    The Political Economy of Climate Governance in Afghanistan: An Analysis of the Context and Challenges
    Photo by Elise Blanchard for The Washington Post via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • The Political Economy of Climate Governance in Afghanistan: An Analysis of the Context and Challenges

    Even though it is one of the world’s lowest emitters of greenhouse gases, Afghanistan is among the 10 countries most vulnerable to climate change and severe weather conditions. Recent economic and humanitarian challenges, compounded by a political crisis of legitimacy and governance, exacerbate the situation, limiting the country’s ability to mitigate climate-induced fragility and build long-term resilience.

    February 20, 2024

    US response to Tower 22 attack in Jordan: Less intense, more restrained than anticipated
    Photo by Ameer Al-Mohammedawi/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • US response to Tower 22 attack in Jordan: Less intense, more restrained than anticipated

    On the evening of Saturday, Feb. 3, local time, US warplanes bombed facilities used by Iranian forces and Iran-backed militias in Syria and Iraq, in retaliation for the death of 3 US service members in a Jan. 28 drone attack on Tower 22, a US military base in northeastern Jordan on the Syrian border. The airstrikes primarily targeted locations in eastern Syria and western Iraq.

    Partisan press: The dominance of party-backed media in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region
    Photo by Winthrop Rodgers
  • Analysis
  • Partisan press: The dominance of party-backed media in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region

    The media landscape in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region is dominated by outlets affiliated with political parties. As a result, media coverage largely promotes the interests of politically motivated patrons, rather than performing a public service mission of providing impartial and high-quality information.

    January 26, 2024