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A shifting development paradigm for the Middle East and North Africa
A picture taken on December 12, 2017 shows an elevated view of al-Attaba district on the edge of downtown Cairo, Egypt.
  • Analysis
  • A shifting development paradigm for the Middle East and North Africa

    Economic development paradigms have shifted focus over past decades: from minimizing imports to encouraging exports as the path to prosperity. Individual countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) have had little success under either paradigm — the result being stagnant economies and high unemployment, especially among young people. Perhaps now is the time for MENA countries to follow a different path and focus on harnessing the power of their collective domestic demand to foster economic development.

    September 5, 2019

    The Syrian Oil Crisis: Causes, Possible Responses, and Implications
    Iranian supertanker Grace 1 off the coast of Gibraltar on August 15, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • The Syrian Oil Crisis: Causes, Possible Responses, and Implications

    Unlike most other goods, the inflation-adjusted prices of oil and oil derivatives actually became cheaper in the years after the Syrian uprising and the loss of most of the country’s oil fields. Iran stepped in to fill the gap by shipping oil by sea through the Suez Canal. In recent months, however, these shipments seem to have ground to a halt, crippling regime-controlled areas. This paper examines several competing explanations for the slowdown in Iranian oil shipments, explores a range of possible responses for the Assad regime, and takes a closer look at the implications for the regime, its allies, and regular Syrians.

    August 28, 2019

    There Is No "Status Quo": Drivers of Violence in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
    A picture taken on February 1, 2019 from Jabel Mukaber, a Palestinian neighbourhood in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem shows the Dome of the Rock mosque (golden dome) and al-Aqsa Mosque (silver dome) at the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem's Old City.
  • Analysis
  • There Is No "Status Quo": Drivers of Violence in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

    The Israeli-Palestinian conflict remains a destabilizing element in an already volatile Middle East. The Palestinians are too weak to wrest their independence from Israel. But as long as their right to self-determination is denied, they are likely to engage in regular violence targeting Israel. Absent outside intervention, Israel is powerful enough that it can suppress Palestinian demands for freedom — but it is not able to completely pacify the Palestinians. Thus, the conflict continues, punctuated every few years by rounds of more significant violence.

    August 20, 2019

    Ambassador Friedman: Palestinians already have autonomy
    A Palestinian protester waves a Palestinian flag during a demonstration in the village of Ras Karkar west of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank on September 4, 2018.
  • Analysis
  • Ambassador Friedman: Palestinians already have autonomy

    Autonomy is normally given to a specific cultural or national group as part of a political agreement. For Palestinians, the idea that autonomy is the goal of talks is unhelpful because they already have autonomy.

    August 15, 2019

    Oman's new embassy in Palestine
    In this handout from the Palestinian Press Office, Palestinan President Mahmoud Abbas (R) meets with Oman's Sultan Qaboos bin Said on January 14, 2010 in Muscat, Oman.
  • Analysis
  • Oman's new embassy in Palestine

    The news came eight months after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu paid a visit to the Omani capital for surprise talks with Sultan Qaboos in October 2018, and four months after Minister Responsible for Foreign Affairs Yusuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah met with Netanyahu in Poland during the Trump administration’s “Peace and Security in the Middle East” summit.

    August 12, 2019

    Monday Briefing: US-Turkey dispute over Syria comes to a head
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing: US-Turkey dispute over Syria comes to a head

    This week’s briefing on recent news and upcoming events in the region including the Turkish-U.S. crisis meeting in Ankara on Syria, the resumption of U.S.-Taliban negotiations, Trump’s creation of a new “dovish” line on Iran, a rise in Egypt’s poverty levels, Sudan’s democratic transition, the easing of female guardianship rules in Saudi Arabia, and the end of the ceasefire in Idlib, featuring Charles Lister, Marvin G. Weinbaum, Paul Salem, W. Robert Pearson, Mirette F. Mabrouk, Thomas W. Lippman, and Robert S. Ford.

    The Huawei Wars and the 5G Revolution in the Gulf
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Huawei Wars and the 5G Revolution in the Gulf

    The fifth generation of mobile phone networks (5G) is poised to become a key enabler of the digitalization of economies and societies. Digital transformation is at the heart of GCC nations’ ambitions to accelerate economic diversification, deliver public services more effectively and efficiently, and promote sustainable growth. GCC ambitions to accelerate the large-scale deployment of 5G dovetail with those of China’s hi-tech giant Huawei, which is competing for market share in infrastructure and smartphones. However, the US push to stymie Huawei’s efforts to expand the reach of its networking technologies has emerged as a potential stumbling block to more extensive ties between that company and GCC wireless carriers and customers.

    OPEC+ agrees to production-cut extension and new charter amid rising Middle East tensions
    Oil ministers attend the 176th meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) conference and the 6th meeting of the OPEC and non-OPEC countries on July 1, 2019 in Vienna, Austria.
  • Analysis
  • OPEC+ agrees to production-cut extension and new charter amid rising Middle East tensions

    OPEC+ nations have ended speculation about whether they would continue oil production cuts by agreeing to a nine-month extension. Led by the global petroleum powers Saudi Arabia and Russia, the group agreed on July 2 to extend the current level of cuts until the second quarter of 2020.

    July 24, 2019

    Monday Briefing: Pakistani PM Khan heads to the White House
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing: Pakistani PM Khan heads to the White House

    This week’s briefing on recent news and upcoming events in the region including Imran Khan’s visit to the White House, tensions between President Trump and Congress over Turkey’s new S-400 system, escalation in the Straits of Gibraltar and Hormuz, military restructuring in Iraq, increased collaboration on the region’s power supply, and changes to Egypt’s social safety net, featuring Arif Rafiq, Gonul Tol, Ruba Husari, Robert S. Ford, Dr. Ibrahim Saif, and Mirette F. Mabrouk.

    Iran, Russia, and the impact of US sanctions
    Iranian pipelines on Khark Island
  • Analysis
  • Iran, Russia, and the impact of US sanctions

    When it was signed four years ago, the Iran nuclear deal was widely perceived as a diplomatic triumph, a move that would help reintegrate Iran into the global economy and restore its relations with the West. Things haven’t quite turned out that way, however.

    July 17, 2019

    The untapped potential of a Levant Union
    A picture taken on February 7, 2018 shows a view of container cranes and port machinery at the Tripoli Free Zone in the port of the same name in northern Lebanon. (Photo by IBRAHIM CHALHOUB / AFP) (Photo credit should read IBRAHIM CHALHOUB/AFP/Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • The untapped potential of a Levant Union

    The idea of establishing a Levant Union — one not unlike the European Union (EU), but composed of the Levantine states of Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Palestine, Jordan, and by extension, Egypt and Cyprus — is one that ought to be explored. Such an arrangement would offer untapped potential for trade, supported by the growing trend toward greater regionalization, fueled by the rise in protectionism, increasing multipolarity, and corporate regionalization.

    July 11, 2019

    Interconnected: Trade, food security, and stability in the GCC and MENA
    An Emirati man reads the front of a package of Indian Basmati rice in a supermarket in Dubai on July 19, 2008. Faced with the scarcity of fertile land and water, and the surging world prices of food, the wealthy Gulf states are seeking to secure food supplies through agricultural investments abroad.
  • Analysis
  • Interconnected: Trade, food security, and stability in the GCC and MENA

    It is easy to overlook the fact that food security could be an issue of concern in the Gulf Cooperation Council. After all, its member states have some of the world’s highest per capita income levels. Food supplies in the Gulf are normally abundant and stable. Were they to be disrupted, however, it could lead to food security challenges and a chain of adverse consequences for human security throughout the region.

    July 9, 2019

    Monday Briefing: Bahrain workshop is little more than a kabuki show
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing: Bahrain workshop is little more than a kabuki show

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Gerald Feierstein, Guney Yildiz, Nathan Stock, Elizabeth Dent, and Eran Etzion provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including this week’s Bahrain “workshop” on Palestine’s economic development, an opposition victory in Istanbul’s rerun election, the release of a portion of the Trump administration’s Israel-Palestine peace plan, the fracturing of the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS, and Tuesday’s trilateral meeting between the U.S., Israel, and Russia.

    June 24, 2019

    The stakes are high in Istanbul’s election rerun
    People watch a live broadcast of a televised debate between Istanbul's mayoral candidate Binali Yildirim (R) of Turkey's ruling AKP, and Istanbul's deposed mayor Ekrem Imamoglu (L) of the CHP, is shown on a screen at a tea house in Diyarbakir on June 16, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • The stakes are high in Istanbul’s election rerun

    Istanbulites are only few days away from delivering their verdict on who will run the city for the next five years. The June 23rd election marks the second time in the last three months that local voters will choose their mayor, and the stakes are high for both sides.

    Saudi Arabia looks abroad to LNG and petrochemicals to hedge its bets
    Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber(R), the director general and CEO of ADNOC, shakes hands with Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser after signing a cooperation deal in Abu Dhabi on November 12, 2018.
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia looks abroad to LNG and petrochemicals to hedge its bets

    In late May, Saudi Aramco signed an agreement to buy 5 million tons per annum of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from San Diego-based Sempra Energy’s planned LNG terminal in Port Arthur, Texas. The deal exemplifies Saudi Aramco’s determination to boost the share of LNG and petrochemicals in its portfolio before its long-awaited public offering in 2021.

    June 5, 2019