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Perspectives from the Bonn Climate Change Conference Ahead of COP28
  • Podcast
  • Perspectives from the Bonn Climate Change Conference Ahead of COP28

    This year’s Bonn Climate Change Conference featured events and discussions focusing on climate issues such as adaptation, mitigation, the global stocktake, and climate loss and damage. Progress on these issues at the Bonn Conference is intended to translate into potential draft decisions to be adopted at the COP28 meeting taking place in the UAE later this year. Mohammed Mahmoud discusses the details of the Bonn Conference, how it may have shaped the MENA climate change agenda, and other major outcomes with Athra Khamis and Neeshad Shafi, two of MEI’s non-resident scholars in the Climate and Water Program that attended the Bonn Conference.

    July 10, 2023

    The Gulf Goes Green
  • Commentary
  • The Gulf Goes Green

    In the last few years, the global energy outlook has been transformed. The rise of populist politics and a growing sense of urgency about climate change have roiled debates about energy policy in wealthy countries, generating a dizzying mix of new industrial policies. The COVID-19 pandemic made it far harder to predict fuel prices and consumption patterns and forced many countries to confront their connections to fragile multistate supply chains and legacy petrostates.

    No real winners, only losers, following Israeli assault on Jenin
    Photo by ZAIN JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • No real winners, only losers, following Israeli assault on Jenin

    In the wake of Israel’s deadly assault on the Jenin refugee camp, the largest military operation in the West Bank in nearly two decades, Israeli military officials have been quick to declare victory. But contrary to such bluster, the attack produced no real winners and only losers.

    July 7, 2023

    July 4 from abroad: The many ages of America in the Arab world
    Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • July 4 from abroad: The many ages of America in the Arab world

    From the past century until today, the U.S. has cast a long shadow in the Middle East region and relations have gone through many highs and lows. It is important to be aware of this trajectory to better understand the relationship today; and perhaps there are lessons to inform the future of the relationship in the coming century.

    July 7, 2023

    Coercive deprivation: Unraveling the Assad regime’s policy on domestic reconstruction
    Photo by AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Coercive deprivation: Unraveling the Assad regime’s policy on domestic reconstruction

    Since the early years of the Syrian conflict, the Assad regime has systematically diverted local resources dedicated for reconstruction purposes to rehabilitate facilities in areas and sectors that benefit it and its inner circle, as well as placed the burden of rehabilitating properties onto Syrians themselves. To finance this policy, the regime has exploited four key resources, including imposing multiple reconstruction taxes, diverting U.N. and INGO early recovery and rehabilitation projects, capitalizing on local-led crowdfunding campaigns, and forcing Syrians to bear the cost of repairing their own damaged properties.

    The false promise of Washington’s foreign military sales reforms
    Photo credit FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • The false promise of Washington’s foreign military sales reforms

    Over the past few weeks, the US State Department and the US Defense Department released separate but similar statements about the changes each organization has instituted to the Foreign Military Sales, or FMS, process. There are 80 recommendations coming out of the Pentagon, but in short, they all advocate for less bureaucracy and more speed.

    July 7, 2023

    Georgia the interconnector — but where’s Washington?
    Photo by Turkish Presidency/Murat Cetinmuhurdar/Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Georgia the interconnector — but where’s Washington?

    For the sake of safeguarding transatlantic — and thus also American — security interests in the South Caucasus, it is becoming increasingly imperative that the United States better anchor itself economically, politically, and militarily in the eastern Black Sea region, especially strategically placed Georgia.

    July 7, 2023

    Understanding the growing Indo-Israeli strategic cyber partnership
    Photo by Indian Ministry of External Affairs / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Understanding the growing Indo-Israeli strategic cyber partnership

    India and Israel have embarked on a mission to enhance their bilateral strategic cyber partnership. Private-sector collaboration and investment have laid the foundation for this partnership, which has now expanded to government-level agreements and frameworks.

    The Gulf’s twin failings: Innovation and private sector employment for nationals
    Photo by KARIM SAHIB/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Gulf’s twin failings: Innovation and private sector employment for nationals

    The Gulf states emerged from the global pandemic with the wind in their economic sails. But high-profile events like Qatar’s hosting of the FIFA World Cup and the UAE’s World Expo continued to mask two subtle but major weaknesses that have plagued them for decades. Why do Gulf economies lack innovation? And why do they struggle to create private sector employment for nationals?

    July 6, 2023

    Saudi Arabia can alleviate US concerns over its civilian nuclear energy program. Here’s how.
    Photo by AHMED YOSRI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Saudi Arabia can alleviate US concerns over its civilian nuclear energy program. Here’s how.

    Saudi leaders have stepped up their plans for developing peaceful nuclear energy, inviting technical bids to the planned construction of two 1.4 gigawatt-electric nuclear reactors and restating the kingdom’s intention to use domestic uranium resources for producing low-enriched uranium as nuclear fuel.

    July 5, 2023

    Addressing challenges to tolerance and religious diversity in Iraq
    Photo by SAFIN HAMID/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Addressing challenges to tolerance and religious diversity in Iraq

    Iraq has long had a troubled history with its ethno-religious minorities, one full of oppression and violence. This was true under the Ba’athist regime and continued after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, reaching a nadir with the rise of the Islamic State terrorist group. Although Iraq is now enjoying its most stable period in the past two decades, it is also a case study of the pernicious effects of structural violence, especially toward the more marginalized and vulnerable segments of society.

    July 5, 2023

    Saudis in charge: Managing OPEC+’s unhappy days
    Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Saudis in charge: Managing OPEC+’s unhappy days

    The current complex situation in the global oil market seriously tests the abilities of OPEC+ to play the role of a regulator, forcing Saudi Arabia to assume the main burden of responsibility for keeping oil prices from declining further and for shoring up the cartel ranks.

    The U.S. and EU Should Coordinate their Saudi and Israeli-Palestinian Efforts
  • Commentary
  • The U.S. and EU Should Coordinate their Saudi and Israeli-Palestinian Efforts

    American and European eyes are set on Riyadh. Both the Biden administration and the European External Action Service are currently trying to advance policy moves that involve Saudi Arabia and that – if successful – will reshape the Middle East. Alas, when it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian issue, these European and American efforts are quite different, and even seem contradictory.

    June 29, 2023