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The Multinational Force of Observers and the Sinai Storm
  • Analysis
  • The Multinational Force of Observers and the Sinai Storm

    The 1,667-strong contingent of U.S. and international forces that make up the Multinational Force of Observers (MFO) in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula is in a tough spot. The ongoing failure of the Egyptian government’s war against the ISIS-led rebellion there has shredded the MFO’s mandate to monitor Egyptian and Israeli adherence to their peace treaty. Sinai’s descent into anarchy also puts outnumbered and outgunned U.S. troops in the only location other than Iraq that confronts ISIS in an active theater of war.

    August 27, 2015

    Improved Egypt-Israel Relations through Sinai Crisis: Will They Last?
  • Analysis
  • Improved Egypt-Israel Relations through Sinai Crisis: Will They Last?

    Egyptian diplomats rarely have a good word to say about U.S. policies these days. In contrast, they are enthusiastic in their praise of the close relations between Cairo and Jerusalem—centered on counterterror security and intelligence cooperation in Sinai—and effusive in their acknowledgement of Israel’s response to the bloody insurgency there, led by Egypt’s ISIS affiliate in the “Sinai Province,” Ansar Beit al-Maqdis.

    “Relations with Israel are great,” observed an Egyptian official recently.[1]

    July 24, 2015

    Egypt’s Mahragan: Music of the Masses
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Mahragan: Music of the Masses

    For Egypt’s low-income majority, weddings are the prime source of group entertainment, celebrated like block parties in cramped streets decorated with arabesque tapestries and drenched in colored lights and sound. You won’t hear romantic crooning at these gatherings; in Cairo’s densely-inhabited popular quarters, wedding parties are more akin to raves. The music is raw synthetic beat embroidered with syncopated tabla (Egyptian drum) samples and queasy electronic loops.

    July 7, 2015

    China’s Iran Bet
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • China’s Iran Bet

    Iran offers a unique platform for China’s ambitions in the Middle East, and as such Beijing is willing to bet that the benefits of closer ties with Tehran will outnumber the costs. This analysis examines the calculations China is making regarding its relationship with Iran and argues that deepening bilateral ties reveal the centrality of Iran for China’s Middle East strategy.

    June 8, 2015

    Egypt's Short and Long-Term Challenges
  • Analysis
  • Egypt's Short and Long-Term Challenges

    In the year since being elected to the presidency, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has consolidated a ruling coalition, restored economic growth, and brought back considerable stability to the country after four years of turmoil. But this has come with a harsh crackdown on dissent, a decline in freedoms and human rights, and abuses by the police and judiciary. In the short term, the combination of nationalism, modest economic growth, and highlighting the war on terror is politically sustainable among a broad cross section of the population frustrated by years of uncertainty and economic decline.

    May 27, 2015

    Cairo's Rough, Crowded, and Vital Underground Artery
  • Analysis
  • Cairo's Rough, Crowded, and Vital Underground Artery

    Inaugurated in 1987, Cairo’s Metro was Africa’s first inner-city underground and the embodiment of Hosni Mubarak’s promise to modernize Egypt’s infrastructure. It is hard to think of a Mubarak-era project that was better planned, more efficiently executed, or has had such a functional impact on so many people’s lives. Serving four million passengers daily, the Metro is the fastest, cheapest means of navigating the traffic-congested urban behemoth.

    May 27, 2015

    The United States, the GCC, and Iran: The Crisis that Wasn’t
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The United States, the GCC, and Iran: The Crisis that Wasn’t

    Whatever eventually comes of the security agreements and mutual pledges of support made at last week’s summit conference between President Obama and leaders of the Arab Gulf monarchies, one result is clear: Saudi Arabia and the others may not be enthusiastic about the pending nuclear agreement with Iran, but they will not actively oppose it.

    May 19, 2015

    Reforming Religious Discourse in Egypt
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Reforming Religious Discourse in Egypt

    Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has earned numerous accolades, domestic and international, for his repeated calls for religious discourse away from extremism. Sisi has expressed the conviction that the proclivity to radicalism and conflict is not inherent to Islam, but is the product of the sacralization of texts and the uncritical acceptance of early scholars.

    May 14, 2015

    Egypt: Between Chaos, Authoritarianism, and Democracy
  • Analysis
  • Egypt: Between Chaos, Authoritarianism, and Democracy

    The literature on democratic transitions from the last 50 years has emphasized the process of transforming an authoritarian state into a democracy. Much has been written about negotiations between ancien regimes and democratic forces, particularly the bridges that must be made between elements of old and new regimes. Most studies on democratic transitions also examine the competency or democratic nature of such countries’ institutions.

    May 13, 2015

    Stability in Yemen: A Matter of Gulf Collaboration
  • Analysis
  • Stability in Yemen: A Matter of Gulf Collaboration

    Yemen, like many other states in the region, has never conformed to the norms of an integral nation state; it has been in a state of crisis since at least the 1990s due to constant competition between the ruling state authority and various clans, tribal groups, transnational movements, and secessionists. In addition to these layers of conflict, regional players have tried to exploit domestic instability to further their own interests.

    May 8, 2015

    Defying Gravity: Working Toward a Regional Strategy for a Stable Middle East
  • Analysis
  • Defying Gravity: Working Toward a Regional Strategy for a Stable Middle East

    In this MEI Policy Paper, Ross Harrison asserts that a new regional order is emerging out of the conflicts of the Middle East. The relationships among the pillars of this order–Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Iran–are crucial, as they will largely determine “whether the future of the Middle East will be a continuation of the current chaos and destruction or a more positive transition toward stability and prosperity.” Harrison argues that global powers must concentrate on creating conditions conducive to cooperation among the pillars.

    Egypt's Deregulated Property Market: A Crisis of Affordability
  • Analysis
  • Egypt's Deregulated Property Market: A Crisis of Affordability

    What Egyptians call the azmit al-iskan—the housing crisis—is exemplified by the 1986 movie, Karakon fi-l-Shari‘a, or Prison in the Street. The film depicts a typical middle class family that, evicted from its condemned home, must resort to living in a horse-drawn caravan because a regular apartment is unaffordable. The “prison” in the title is a reference to the father’s numerous altercations with the police, who deem his attempts to make a home quasi-legal—not illegal, but also not legal.

    May 5, 2015

    Bringing China and Islam Closer: The First Chinese Azharites
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Bringing China and Islam Closer: The First Chinese Azharites

    In the 1930s, several groups of Muslim students from China arrived to study at Al-Azhar University in Cairo. They were destined to play an important role in the history of modern Chinese Islam. These 35 Chinese Azharites, all but two from the Sinophone Hui community, helped China to establish lasting links with Egypt and other Muslim countries in the Middle East. They also left a considerable cultural legacy, including translations of crucial texts from both the Islamic and Chinese traditions.

    April 28, 2015

    Cairo’s Townhouse Gallery: Social Transformation through Art
  • Analysis
  • Cairo’s Townhouse Gallery: Social Transformation through Art

    As the urban historian Lewis Mumford pointed out, “When a city has reached the megapolitan stage, it is plainly on the downward path: it needs a terrific exertion of social force to overcome the inertia, to alter the direction of the movement, to resist the immanent processes of disintegration.”[1]

    April 27, 2015

    Rebuilding the U.S.-Egyptian Strategic Relationship
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Rebuilding the U.S.-Egyptian Strategic Relationship

    President Obama’s decision to lift the freeze on delivery of military aid to Egypt was the right thing to do to shore up a key strategic alliance in a region where risks to U.S. security are multiplying rapidly. The United States needs Egypt’s help in confronting terrorist and conventional threats in the region, in maintaining Arab-Israeli stability, and as a key player in Arab diplomacy and coalition building.