Skip to Content

Research & Commentary Results

Filter by
3173 Results
Targeting the Revolutionary Guard: Why Iran’s blame game is not the answer
Scene of the suicide attack on a Revolutionary Guards bus on Khash-Zahedan road in Iran's Sistan and Baluchestan Province on February 13, 2019. At least 20 members of Iran's Revolutionary Guards were killed in a suicide bombing in southeastern Iran.
  • Analysis
  • Targeting the Revolutionary Guard: Why Iran’s blame game is not the answer

    Following the Feb. 13 truck bomb on members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps in Sistan-Baluchistan, the government was quick to blame foreign powers. Iranian officials aim to deflect attention from the country’s intractable internal problems, such as the persecution of its Sunni minority, a deep-rooted issue that has often been overlooked by the international community.

    February 26, 2019

    Javad Zarif resigns as Iran's foreign minister
  • Video
  • Javad Zarif resigns as Iran's foreign minister

    Gerald Feierstein, MEI’s senior vice president, discusses the context of the resignation and its implications for Iran’s foreign policy, including the nuclear deal, as well as for its domestic politics.

    February 25, 2019

    Weekly Briefing: MBS South Asia swing aims to shore up relations
  • Analysis
  • Weekly Briefing: MBS South Asia swing aims to shore up relations

    In this week’s briefing, MEI experts Gerald Feierstein, Charles Lister, Marvin G. Weinbaum, and W. Robert Pearson provide analysis on Saudi-Pakistan relations, Turkish politics in the lead-up to March municipal elections, and the question of what to do with ISIS prisoners after the group’s territorial collapse.

    Yemen: The 60-Year War
    A Yemeni tribesman from the Popular Resistance Committees, supporting forces loyal to Yemen's Saudi-backed President, manoeuvrers a gun mounted on a pick up truck during fighting against Shiite Huthi rebels and their allies on June 30, 2017 in the area of Sirwah, west of Marib city.
  • Analysis
  • Yemen: The 60-Year War

    The ongoing civil conflict in Yemen is a continuation of a cycle of violence, political upheaval, and institutional collapse, caused by the failure of Yemeni society to address and resolve the popular anger and frustration arising from political marginalization, economic disenfranchisement, and the effects of an extractive, corrupt, rentier state.

    February 19, 2019

    Suicide attack strikes Iran’s Revolutionary Guard
    Scene of the suicide attack on a Revolutionary Guards bus on Khash-Zahedan road in Iran's Sistan and Baluchestan Province on February 13, 2019. At least 20 members of Iran's Revolutionary Guards were killed in a suicide bombing in southeastern Iran.
  • Analysis
  • Suicide attack strikes Iran’s Revolutionary Guard

    The suicide attack today, which killed at least 20 members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) in Iran’s southeastern province of Sistan and Baluchistan, may have serious implications for the Iranian government’s ability to maintain the legitimacy of its regional intervention in the eyes of the Iranian people.

    February 13, 2019

    Iran’s Islamic Revolution after 40 years
  • Podcast
  • Iran’s Islamic Revolution after 40 years

    John Limbert, former Deputy Secretary of State for Iran under the Obama administration, and MEI senior fellows Alex Vatanka and Ahmad Majidyar join host Alistair Taylor to discuss the 1979 revolution and its continuing impact on US-Iran relations and the region.

    February 13, 2019

    Climate Change, Sea Level Rise, and Sustainable Urban Adaptation in Arab Coastal Cities
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Climate Change, Sea Level Rise, and Sustainable Urban Adaptation in Arab Coastal Cities

    This article highlights how the lesser-known issue of sea level rise makes Arab states increasingly vulnerable to climate change. Using the city of Doha as a case study to highlight how sea level rise represents a critical threat to many Arab coastal cities and a national security challenge to Gulf Arab nations, this article underscores the need for greater anticipation in the region’s urban planning of the risks posed by climate change and sea level rise.

    February 12, 2019

    Iran’s economic challenges reach a crisis point
  • Analysis
  • Iran’s economic challenges reach a crisis point

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Ahmad Majidyar, Mirette F. Mabrouk, and Hassan Mneimneh provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the 40th anniversary of Iran’s Islamic Revolution, a proposal for constitutional amendments in Egypt, and Iraqi PM Abdul-Mahdi’s first 100 days in office.

    Challenges abound as the Islamic Republic turns 40
    Iranian schoolgirls wave their national flag during celebrations in Tehran's Azadi Square (Freedom Square) to mark the 37th anniversary of the Islamic revolution on February 11, 2016.
  • Analysis
  • Challenges abound as the Islamic Republic turns 40

    This February marks the 40th anniversary of Iran’s 1979 revolution and the birth of the Islamic Republic, but for those in power in Tehran, celebrating the victories of the past is easier than dealing with the problems of the present. Challenges abound on all sides.

    Iran and the Gulf states 40 years after the 1979 revolution
    Ceremony marking the 39th anniversary of the Islamic revolution, at Azadi Square in Tehran, Iran
  • Analysis
  • Iran and the Gulf states 40 years after the 1979 revolution

    Geopolitically, the Iranian Revolution did more to transform the Middle East than any other event in the second half of the 20th century. It aimed to restructure not only Iran’s society and political system, but also others across the Islamic world. Refusing to align with either the United States or the Soviet Union in the Cold War, the newly established Islamic Republic sought to create a new geopolitical order in the Persian Gulf and greater Middle East based on a mantra of “neither East nor West.”

    February 8, 2019

    Why Assad’s alliance with Iran and Hezbollah will endure
  • Analysis
  • Why Assad’s alliance with Iran and Hezbollah will endure

    This article was published by IranSource on February 6, 2019.

    The Tehran-Damascus-Hezbollah trilateral partnership has been decades in the making. It pre-dates the Syrian civil war, has strengthened as a result of the war and will likely endure in the post-war years.

    February 8, 2019

    Growing ties with Russia could strain Saudi-US relations
    Mohammad bin Salman and Vladimir Putin at the G20
  • Analysis
  • Growing ties with Russia could strain Saudi-US relations

    With more of their geopolitical goals aligning, ties between Riyadh and Moscow are growing closer, and the kingdom plans to invest billions of additional dollars in Russian petroleum and other projects.

    February 5, 2019

    Monday Briefing | Iraq: Stuck in the middle again
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing | Iraq: Stuck in the middle again

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Randa Slim, Paul Salem, Ahmad Majidyar, and Marvin G. Weinbaum provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including President Trump’s comment about keeping U.S. troops in Iraq “to be able to watch Iran,” Pope Francis’s trip to the UAE, the EU’s maneuvers to defy U.S. sanctions on Iran, and intra-Afghan talks in Moscow.

    Iraq: Stuck in the middle again

    Randa Slim
    Senior Fellow, Director of Conflict Resolution and Track II Dialogues program

    February 4, 2019

    The Global and Regional Geopolitics of Civil War in the Middle East
    An opposition fighter fires a gun from a village near al-Tamanah during ongoing battles with government forces in Syria's Idlib province on January 11, 2018
  • Analysis
  • The Global and Regional Geopolitics of Civil War in the Middle East

    Power dynamics between the major global and regional powers have indirectly influenced the civil wars currently plaguing the Middle East. The distribution of power caused by end of the Cold War facilitated the creation of two opposing camps that later competed for regional primacy in the civil wars of Iraq, Syria, and Yemen.

    Weekly Briefing: Failed Arab Economic Summit in Beirut underscores divisions
  • Analysis
  • Weekly Briefing: Failed Arab Economic Summit in Beirut underscores divisions

    In this week’s Weekly Briefing, contributors Paul Salem, Marvin G. Weinbaum, William Lawrence, Ruba Husari, and Jean-François Seznec provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the Arab Economic Summit held in Beirut this weekend, Afghanistan’s upcoming presidential elections, strikes in Tunisia, the Trump administration’s next steps on Iranian oil policy, and Saudi Aramco’s $10B bond issue.