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Qatar to Top Agenda of Kuwaiti Emir’s Washington Visit | Weekly Briefing
  • Analysis
  • Qatar to Top Agenda of Kuwaiti Emir’s Washington Visit | Weekly Briefing

    In this week’s briefing, MEI experts Gerald Feierstein, Charles Schmitz, Jonathan M. Winer, and Yousef Munayyer provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Sabah’s upcoming visit to Washington, recent clashes in Yemen, the French Foreign Minister’s trip to Libya, and the U.N. Human Rights Council’s discussion on Israel/Palestine.

    September 5, 2017

    Israel Constrained by New Realities in Syria
  • Analysis
  • Israel Constrained by New Realities in Syria

    Israel has weathered the campaign to oust Bashar al-Assad far better than its neighbors. Unlike many others, Israel was never a true believer in the failed effort to topple the Assad regime, preferring an opportunistic rather than a principled strategy that aimed at keeping Israel out of harm’s way.

    The challenges of postwar Syria, however, may prove more daunting. Israel must now deter any interest by Syria’s Arab and Iranian allies to deploy military forces in Syria against it.

    August 31, 2017

    Iran Expanding Influence in Syria, Despite Israeli Warnings
  • Analysis
  • Iran Expanding Influence in Syria, Despite Israeli Warnings

    Even before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived at the Black Sea resort of Sochi last Wednesday for his sixth consultation in two years with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Moscow’s representative in Tel Aviv laid out a soothing if improbable vision of a Syria free of Iranian troops and Shiite militias.

    August 30, 2017

    Israel-Palestine: What Can Be Learned from Other Conflicts?
  • Video
  • Israel-Palestine: What Can Be Learned from Other Conflicts?

    Israelis and Palestinians tend to be invested in the notion that their conflict is unique in its intractability. But other conflicts have reached a measure of resolution, or at least extended periods of non-violence. Learning from their limited success can offer insights and key policy implications; learning from their failures can provide valuable warnings and lessons. Comparing conflicts can even humanize what’s happening in Israel and the occupied territories.

    August 30, 2017

    Kushner Fails to Impress Palestinians
  • Analysis
  • Kushner Fails to Impress Palestinians

    Jared Kushner was on a Middle East mission last week attempting to do what at least half a dozen U.S. emissaries and special presidential envoys have failed to do for more than two decades: putting the peace process on track toward concluding a final settlement between Israel and the Palestinians. But there was a marked change in the U.S. tone, as Kushner, accompanied by Special Envoy for International Negotiations Jason Greenblatt and Deputy N.S.A. Adviser Dina Powell, met with leaders of Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt before heading to Israel and the West Bank.

    August 29, 2017

    A Return to Ambiguity in U.S.-Egyptian Relations | Monday Briefing
  • Analysis
  • A Return to Ambiguity in U.S.-Egyptian Relations | Monday Briefing

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Paul Salem, Gerald Feierstein, Randa Slim, Bilal Y. Saab, and Jean-François Seznec provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including tensions between Washington and Cairo over Egypt’s excessive authoritarian crackdown, Russia’s attempt to help mediate the G.C.C. crisis, the likely postponement of the Kurdish independence referendum, the performance of the Lebanese Army in anti-ISIS operations, and the Iraqi oil minister’s trip to Moscow to discuss oil production cuts.

    August 28, 2017

    Monday Briefing | Abbas Hoping for a Commitment from Kushner on MidEast Peace
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing | Abbas Hoping for a Commitment from Kushner on MidEast Peace

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Yousef Munayyer, Paul Salem, Ahmad Majidyar, Alex Vatanka, and Gonul Tol provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the upcoming trip by the U.S. delegation headed by Jared Kushner to Israel/Palestine, Iraq’s anti-ISIS operation in Tal Afar, President Trump’s upcoming announcement on U.S. military strategy in Afghanistan, Iran’s efforts to find a role in China’s One Belt, One Road project, and Turkey’s rocky relations with Germany.

    August 21, 2017

    Monday Briefing | Is the Middle East Tilting toward De-Escalation?
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing | Is the Middle East Tilting toward De-Escalation?

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Paul Salem, Gonul Tol, Alex Vatanka, and Jonathan M. Winer provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including Saudi Arabia’s diplomatic engagements in the region, Turkey’s consideration of military operations in northern Syria, Iranian President Rouhani’s centrist cabinet nominations, and Libyan leaders’ decision between greater cooperation or renewed confrontation.

    Iran-Backed Iraqi Militia Group Vows to Fight with Hezbollah against Israel
  • Analysis
  • Iran-Backed Iraqi Militia Group Vows to Fight with Hezbollah against Israel

    Harakat al-Nujaba, an Iranian-supported Iraqi militia group, has announced that it will support the Lebanese Hezbollah in the fight against the “occupying Zionist regime” of Israel, Fars News Agency, which is affiliated with the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (I.R.G.C.) reports.

    August 10, 2017

    Gaza Three Years after the War: Ten Critical Observations
  • Analysis
  • Gaza Three Years after the War: Ten Critical Observations

    Three years ago this summer, on July 8, Israel launched the deadliest attack on the Hamas-run Gaza Strip; the third in less than six years. The war lasted 51 days on end and left in its wake an unprecedented human carnage and caused massive destruction to Gaza’s already frail economy and failing infrastructure. Three years later, Gaza has not recovered. If anything, things have gotten worse; much worse.

    August 9, 2017

    A Band of (Muslim) Brothers? Exploring Bahrain’s Role in the Qatar Crisis
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • A Band of (Muslim) Brothers? Exploring Bahrain’s Role in the Qatar Crisis

    The crisis which has engulfed the Gulf Cooperation Council (G.C.C.) states since June 5, 2017, leading to an unprecedented diplomatic and economic blockade of Qatar, has effectively split the Gulf into three camps, fracturing the uneasy yet much-lauded unity of an alliance which has long prided itself on stability and security. This essay offers a possible explanation for Bahrain’s contradictory position regarding the crisis, and considers whether Manama can maintain it.

    August 3, 2017

    The Palestinians won the 2017 battle for Temple Mount. That’s good for Israel
  • Analysis
  • The Palestinians won the 2017 battle for Temple Mount. That’s good for Israel

    Read the full article on Haaretz

    My day job is as a Professor of Israel Studies at the University of Maryland; every fall I teach a large course entitled “Fundamental Questions of the Israeli/Palestinian Conflict.”  A few years ago I was lecturing about the 1973 Yom Kippur War and explained that, as I see it, the war was essentially as a draw, in which Egypt and Israel both lost and won.

    August 2, 2017

    Netanyahu's Shrewd Political Game Behind Jerusalem Violence
  • Analysis
  • Netanyahu's Shrewd Political Game Behind Jerusalem Violence

    Jerusalem’s Old City is a tinderbox that could  set off a regional conflagration. This is a demonstrably true statement: when Ariel Sharon, then an opposition politician, stood surrounded by security guards on the steps in front of the Dome of the Rock in September 2000, and proclaimed that it would remain in Israeli hands forever, the consequence of his populist blustering was the Second Intifada.

    July 31, 2017