Skip to Content

Research & Commentary Results

Filter by
1085 Results
Pakistan’s strategic defense pact with Saudi Arabia: A new security architecture in the wider Middle East
Photo via Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan’s strategic defense pact with Saudi Arabia: A new security architecture in the wider Middle East

    Following Israel’s September 9 strike on Hamas targets in Qatar, Pakistan has taken swift and significant foreign policy steps in response and adopted an unusually assertive stance. This shift was largely influenced by Pakistan’s military chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir. The latter is determined to enhance his country’s strategic autonomy and diplomatic leverage in an increasingly complex international environment by positioning Pakistan as a key security actor and an emerging middle power on the global stage.

    Silent leverage, quiet gains? China and the Saudi-Pakistan defense pact
    Photo by Madoka Ikegami-Pool/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Silent leverage, quiet gains? China and the Saudi-Pakistan defense pact

    The Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement (SMDA) between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, signed in Riyadh on September 17, is far more than a bilateral pledge. It represents a profound reordering of alignments in the Gulf and South Asia, reflecting and reinforcing the broader erosion of US preeminence in the Eurasian security architecture. While much of the initial commentary centered on the striking commitment of a wealthy Gulf monarchy to the defense of a nuclear-armed South Asian state, as well as the question of whether Pakistan had in fact extended its nuclear umbrella to Saudi Arabia, the deeper story is arguably China’s potential advance.

    A Middle East NATO? Regional Security Options After Doha
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • A Middle East NATO? Regional Security Options After Doha

    Israel’s September 9 strike on Hamas leaders in Doha rattled Gulf capitals and revived a decades-old debate over whether the region needs a NATO-style defensive alliance. MEI Senior Fellow Jason Campbell joins hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj to unpack why past attempts at collective defense have fallen short, whether this moment is different, and what the crisis means for US security strategy in the Middle East.

    September 25, 2025

    Israel’s Doha strike could further destabilize region, undermine US security partnerships
    Photo by JACQUELINE PENNEY/AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Israel’s Doha strike could further destabilize region, undermine US security partnerships

    The reverberations of Israel’s strike on the Hamas negotiating team in Doha yesterday are still rippling across the globe and will continue to for the foreseeable future. Its ramifications are profound and will alter the geopolitical landscape not just in the Middle East but likely on a global scale.

    Europe’s snapback gamble on Iran
    Photo by AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Europe’s snapback gamble on Iran

    The coming weeks may prove decisive in Europe’s long struggle to manage Iran’s nuclear ambitions. On Aug. 28, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany announced they will trigger the “snapback” sanctions mechanism. Whether Europe’s gamble succeeds will determine both the future of non-proliferation and the credibility of Europe as a strategic actor.

    UNIFIL should reset or go home
    Photo by Niall Carson/PA Images via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • UNIFIL should reset or go home

    At the end of August, the future of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), established nearly 50 years ago, goes on trial in New York, where the Security Council will debate the renewal of its mandate. Nearly two decades after its transformation under UN Security Council Resolution 1701, UNIFIL is now part of the problem it was created to solve. Ten thousand blue helmets from almost 50 countries, including major North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) members, failed to stop the latest conflict between Israel and Hizballah, and, if business continues as usual, will fail to prevent the next.

    Lebanon and the UNIFIL Mandate: Disarming Hizballah and Reclaiming Sovereignty
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Lebanon and the UNIFIL Mandate: Disarming Hizballah and Reclaiming Sovereignty

    With its new government at the half-year mark and the UNIFIL international peacekeeping force’s mandate due for reauthorization at month’s end, Lebanon stands at a pivotal moment. In this episode of Middle East Focus, hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj are joined by MEI Senior Fellow Fadi Nicholas Nassar to evaluate whether the Lebanese state can reclaim its sovereignty, starting with the disarmament of Hizballah and the enforcement of a cease-fire.

    August 7, 2025

    Digital frontlines: What the 12-day war revealed about the evolution of Iran’s cyber strategy
    Photo by SASAN/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Digital frontlines: What the 12-day war revealed about the evolution of Iran’s cyber strategy

    During June’s Israel-Iran war, a quieter but significant battle played out in cyberspace, highlighting how Tehran has refined its use of digital tools to shape the battlespace, control domestic narratives, and project influence abroad. While largely ineffective in operational terms, Iran’s cyber response marked a new phase in its strategic evolution.

    August 4, 2025

    2025 Summer Reading List
    Photo by Pedro Fleitas on Unsplash
  • Commentary
  • 2025 Summer Reading List

    As the dog days of August approach, we are pleased to share a curated summer reading list featuring some of VP for Policy Ken Pollack’s favorite books on the region. Covering a variety of timely and engaging topics, the list offers recommendations for anyone interested in deepening their understanding of the Middle East.

    What happens when the US and Iran lose their strategic ambiguity?
  • Video
  • What happens when the US and Iran lose their strategic ambiguity?

    MEI Senior Fellow Ross Harrison breaks down how this foreign policy approach can help mitigate conflict—and how both Washington and Tehran may have undermined their own ambiguity during the recent 12-day war, with potentially lasting consequences for regional stability.

    July 14, 2025

    The 12-day Israel-Iran war: China’s response and its implications
    Photo by Lintao Zhang/Pool/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The 12-day Israel-Iran war: China’s response and its implications

    Last June’s Israel-Iran conflict became a revealing stress test for Beijing’s Middle East strategy, its role in global diplomacy, and the coherence of what some have described as an emergent “Axis of Upheaval” between China, Russia, and Iran.

    Pakistan’s ability to thread the needle in relations with the US and Iran tested by the Israel-Iran war
    Photo by AAMIR QURESHI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan’s ability to thread the needle in relations with the US and Iran tested by the Israel-Iran war

    When the Israel-Iran war broke out and the United States decided to assist the Israeli side by striking Iran’s nuclear program, both Tehran and Washington expected Islamabad to side with their respective positions. This situation placed the Pakistani government in a politically sensitive and diplomatically delicate position.

    Russia’s military presence in post-Assad Syria: A growing security liability undermining stability
    Photo by Izzettin Kasim/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Russia’s military presence in post-Assad Syria: A growing security liability undermining stability

    Six months since the collapse of the Assad regime, the Russian military presence in Syria has remained entrenched in strategic locations such as the Hmeimim airbase and Tartous port on the coast, as well as at Qamishli airport in the northeast. This persistence has reignited an increasingly pressing debate about Moscow’s role in the new Syria.

    July 2, 2025

    The balance of power in Yemen after the US-Houthi cease-fire
    Photo by Mohammed Hamoud/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The balance of power in Yemen after the US-Houthi cease-fire

    The May 6 cease-fire between the United States and the Houthi militia in Yemen has had a consolidating effect on the balance of power inside the war-torn state and hardened the status quo of the country’s civil war. In turn, the outcome of Israel and Iran’s subsequent 12-day war has the potential to temporarily shake up this status quo once again; but Yemen’s fracturing anti-Houthi coalition is unlikely to be able to exploit that opportunity.

    June 30, 2025

    After the 12-Day War: Iran, Israel, and the Future Regional Order
  • Podcast
  • After the 12-Day War: Iran, Israel, and the Future Regional Order

    The dust has barely settled following the dramatic 12-day war between Israel and Iran, but its political and strategic reverberations are already shaping the future of the Middle East. In this episode of Middle East Focus, Ross Harrison, senior fellow and book series editor at the Middle East Institute, joins hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj to assess what comes next — from Tehran’s internal power recalibrations to the future of Iran’s forward defense strategy, and shifting regional alliances.

    June 26, 2025