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Q&A with Hala Shukrallah, President of Egypt's Al-Dostour Party
  • Analysis
  • Q&A with Hala Shukrallah, President of Egypt's Al-Dostour Party

    Hala Shukrallah, president of Egypt’s Al Dostour (Constitution) Party, spoke with MEI about the party’s preparations for upcoming parliamentary elections, its legislative agenda, and the challenges it will face in Parliament. See more of her comments at this year’s Egypt Conference.

    Q: How has the Dostour party been preparing for the upcoming parliamentary elections?

    September 26, 2014

    Is Turkey Finally Ready to Aid Military Strikes Against ISIS?
  • Analysis
  • Is Turkey Finally Ready to Aid Military Strikes Against ISIS?

    This article was first published on CNN.

    Turkey, a key U.S. ally and a NATO member that borders the territory captured by ISIS, which now calls itself the Islamic State, in Syria and Iraq, could play a critical role in the U.S.-led military assault against the jihadist group.

    Turkey: A Reluctant Partner in the Fight against the Islamic State
  • Analysis
  • Turkey: A Reluctant Partner in the Fight against the Islamic State

    Last week, President Obama laid out his strategy to fight the Islamic State (also known as ISIS or ISIL). The strategy includes a systematic campaign of airstrikes; support to forces fighting ISIS on the ground, including Iraqi Security forces and the Peshmerga (the Kurdish armed forces); redoubling U.S. efforts to cut off ISIS funding; improving intelligence; strengthening defenses; and stemming the flow of foreign fighters into and out of the Middle East.

    Secular Parties in Egypt’s Political Landscape
  • Analysis
  • Secular Parties in Egypt’s Political Landscape

    Most of Egypt’s newly created secular political parties have complained bitterly about the Parliament Election Law, which former Interim President Adly Mansour rushed to approve in his last day in office, before handing over power to newly-elected President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi.

    September 11, 2014

    Egyptian Economic Challenges and Policy Exigencies
  • Analysis
  • Egyptian Economic Challenges and Policy Exigencies

    In the last three years, Egypt’s economic position has deteriorated dramatically. Domestic and external deficits have increased, causing public debt to grow sharply, external reserves to fall, investment to shrink, and inflation to increase. In the process, growth decelerated, unemployment rose, income distribution worsened, and the medium term economic outlook became clouded.

    September 8, 2014

    The Power Generation Crisis in Egypt
  • Analysis
  • The Power Generation Crisis in Egypt

    Although power cuts are hardly new in Egypt, no Egyptian government has tackled the problem seriously and transparently. After the January 25, 2011 uprising, Egyptians had less patience with the failures of state services and demanded change.

    September 3, 2014

    Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood: Politically Down and Out?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood: Politically Down and Out?

    On August 9, 2014, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt began another chapter in its besieged political life.  The highest administrative court in Egypt, the Supreme Administrative Court, dissolved the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood.  The Court also liquidated all of the FJP’s assets in an effort to quash any further political ambitions and activities that the Brotherhood might have in Egypt.  The ruling—a calculated move conducted prior to upcoming parliamentary elections, scheduled for later this year—was an attempt

    September 3, 2014

    The Road Not Taken
  • Analysis
  • The Road Not Taken

    Within four months of the military’s ouster of Mohamed Morsi, one of the icons of liberalism serving in the new cabinet, Ziad Bahaa-Eldin, admitted to CNN that those who called for political reconciliation, like himself, were alienated by the political mood, where the very concept of reconciliation has become “a dirty word” in Egypt.

    September 2, 2014

    Turkey’s Syria and Iraq Policy Hostage to Islamic State
  • Analysis
  • Turkey’s Syria and Iraq Policy Hostage to Islamic State

    As the United States struggles to mobilize a coalition of allies including Turkey behind potential military action against the Islamic State (formerly known as ISIS) in Syria, Turkey’s Iraq and Syria policies remain captive to ISIS and the 49 Turkish hostages it holds. Turkey might be key to the U.S. effort to confront ISIS, and it is in a very tough spot.

    Egypt's Emerging Libya Policy
  • Analysis
  • Egypt's Emerging Libya Policy

    Several weeks ago an Islamist and jihadist alliance led by Ansar al-Sharia–a group with ties to Islamic State (formerly ISIS)–took control of Benghazi and declared an “Islamic Emirate.” A few days ago, an Islamist alliance took control of Tripoli’s main airport. These developments have come as a shock to the Egyptian government, which considers an Islamic state on Egypt’s 720-mile long western border an immediate threat to Egypt’s national security. This helps explain Egypt’s alleged role in recent airstrikes inside Libya coordinated with the United Arab Emirates.

    August 27, 2014

    Alexandria Artists Make the City Their Canvas
  • Analysis
  • Alexandria Artists Make the City Their Canvas

    Alexandria, like Cairo, is a mismanaged city with little to offer by way of basic services, much less cultural activities. But unlike Egypt’s insular, desert capital, it is a Mediterranean city, cooler, less polluted or crowded than Cairo (with just six million inhabitants), no longer a cosmopolitan hub but open to the world in material and other ways. There are signs here of a trend toward “social transformation”—a focus on the immediate surroundings, the city itself, to explore and expand its possibilities.

    August 22, 2014

    Pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party is Big Winner in Turkish Elections
  • Analysis
  • Pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party is Big Winner in Turkish Elections

    A recent statement from the imprisoned leader of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, Abdullah Ocalan, hails a new era for Turkey’s Kurds. In a statement from his cell on the prison island of Imrali in the Sea of Marmara, Ocalan said that Turkey was now on the verge of “historic developments” after last week’s presidential elections and declared that through a major democratic negotiation, the 30-year war was coming to an end.

    Egypt’s Suez Canal Corridor Project
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Suez Canal Corridor Project

    If it manages to overcome some rather formidable obstacles, Egypt’s much touted “mega project of the century”—the Suez Canal Corridor Project (SCCP)—has the potential to transform the country into a world-class center for trade and industry.

    August 19, 2014

    Austerity without Protection: Egypt's 2014 Budget
  • Analysis
  • Austerity without Protection: Egypt's 2014 Budget

    As voters headed for the polling stations in late May to elect a president for the second time since Hosni Mubarak’s 2011 ouster, the interim authority announced the state budget for the 2014 financial year. The budget included austerity measures that were sure to be painful for ordinary Egyptians, and the timing of the announcement suggests that the interim authority wanted to shield the new president from responsibility.

    August 17, 2014

    An Egyptian Reset on Gaza
  • Analysis
  • An Egyptian Reset on Gaza

    The enormous costs exacted on Palestinians in Gaza by Israel’s Operation Protective Edge have sparked a rocky rehabilitation of Egyptian attitudes toward Palestinians among Egypt’s political class and the public at large. Consequently, the Sisi government may see the merits of moderating the hardline approach to Gaza that has characterized Egypt’s polices since the ousting of President Mohammad Morsi one year ago.

    Discussions between Egypt and Other Concerned Parties

    August 14, 2014