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Gaza: A Cautionary Refugee Lesson
  • Analysis
  • Gaza: A Cautionary Refugee Lesson

    While the international community focuses on the latest refugee crisis fomented by the cascading calamities now engulfing the Middle East, Gaza—home to the region’s first permanent refugees—offers a cautionary lesson about the costs of man-made hardship and instability.
     
    The UN recently reported that the infant mortality rate in the Gaza Strip has increased for the first time since Israel occupied the area in June 1967, in part because of the draconian restrictions on Gaza trade imposed by Israel and Egypt during the last decade.

    September 22, 2015

    Can #Youstink Campaign Shake Up Lebanon?
  • Analysis
  • Can #Youstink Campaign Shake Up Lebanon?

    Read the full article on CNN.com.

    Lebanese have long suffered through water shortages, regular electricity blackouts, a leaking sewage system and poor health and education services. But as trash has piled up on the streets in recent weeks, it looks like the people of Lebanon have had enough.

    “You Stink” is the message they are sending. And the campaign might just succeed where others have failed.

    August 31, 2015

    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

    The Post-Abbas Palestinian National Struggle
  • Analysis
  • The Post-Abbas Palestinian National Struggle

    In the coming months, we can expect that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas will no longer occupy the executive leadership position in the muqata, the interim Palestinian government headquarters in Ramallah. His age and his repeated insistence that he does not plan to run in new elections, as well as his most recent comments about his willingness to resign, point to this fact.

    August 10, 2015

    Why the Iran Deal is Good for Israel
  • Analysis
  • Why the Iran Deal is Good for Israel

    Read the full op-ed on CNN.com.

    Few states face the kind of complex, sustained security challenges that Israel does.

    Israel has not enjoyed one day of peace with its neighbors since its independence in 1948. Many Arab and Muslim states have maintained an economic and political boycott against Israel for decades.

    August 5, 2015

    Another Palestinian Uprising?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Another Palestinian Uprising?

    Predictions of a new Palestinian intifada in the occupied territories tend to accompany every breakdown in the diplomatic process, announcement of a new colonial expansion project, and Israeli violence against Palestinian life—such as the recent horrific murder of Palestinian infant Ali Dawabsheh by settler terrorists who set fire to his West Bank family home.

    August 5, 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

    The Syrian Druze at a Crossroads
  • Analysis
  • The Syrian Druze at a Crossroads

    In the last few weeks, the Syrian Druze have been a focal point in significant fighting on the ground. If their role in the fighting continues, or even if it changes, the Druze will likely have a profound impact on the trajectory of the Syrian conflict.

    July 13, 2015

    Tensions in the Golan
  • Analysis
  • Tensions in the Golan

    On June 22, members of the Druse minority in the Israeli town of Hurfeish threw rocks at an ambulance believed to be transporting wounded Syrian Jabhat al-Nusra rebels to medical care in Israel. The following day, a similar incident in the occupied Golan Heights resulted in the killing of one wounded rebel, also of Nusra.

    June 24, 2015

    Be Careful What You Wish For: A Security Council Resolution on Palestine Might Come True
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Be Careful What You Wish For: A Security Council Resolution on Palestine Might Come True

    For the first time in decades absolutely nothing is happening on the Israeli-Palestinian diplomatic front. There is no agreed-upon structure for diplomatic engagement under U.S.—or anyone’s—guidance. Moreover, there is an international consensus that includes the United States that doubts, with good reason, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s commitment to a two-state solution.

    June 6, 2015

    Will China Interfere in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Will China Interfere in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict?

    In June 1954, the leaders of China, India, and Burma (now Myanmar) issued a joint statement affirming the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence―mutual respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity, mutual non-aggression, non-interference in each other’s internal affairs, equality and mutual benefit, and peaceful coexistence―as the basis for conducting international relations. Since then, China has adhered strictly to the principle of non-interference in other countries’ domestic turmoil, as displayed prominently over the past several years in Beijing’s response to the Syrian civil war.

    May 6, 2015

    When it Comes to Israeli Occupation, Better is Not Good Enough
  • Analysis
  • When it Comes to Israeli Occupation, Better is Not Good Enough

    Palestinians, beset by calamities at every turn, have all but ceased to think about their indeterminate prospects for independence and freedom. This dismal state of affairs suits Israel’s newly reelected Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fine. His opposition to a sovereign Palestinian state, broadcast in word and deed, leaves little room for doubt.

    The bar has been set so low that all concerned are searching for any shred of evidence that merely hints at better times for Palestinians, who have now lived under Israeli rule for almost a half century.

    April 21, 2015

    Collection Spotlight: See No Evil
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Collection Spotlight: See No Evil

    Robert Baer’s See No Evil presents a firsthand account of the life of a CIA case officer in the war on terror. From recruiting agents in the volatile Bekaa Valley in Lebanon to wiretapping Abu Nidal students in France, Baer provides a fascinating description of his CIA service.

    April 6, 2015

    Israeli Elections and U.S. Policy Reevaluation: What Lies Ahead?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Israeli Elections and U.S. Policy Reevaluation: What Lies Ahead?

    The Obama administration has lost all patience with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s defiant challenges to two basic U.S. goals: a two-state Israeli-Palestinian peace and a nuclear deal with Iran. Netanyahu’s hostility and the emergence after the March 15 elections of a new, more right-wing coalition, have triggered a major crisis in relations and an apparent decision by Obama to “reevaluate” U.S. policy.

    March 30, 2015