Skip to Content

Research & Commentary Results

Filter by
1542 Results
Russia’s aggressive behavior in the Black Sea can be challenged
Photo courtesy of the author
  • Analysis
  • Russia’s aggressive behavior in the Black Sea can be challenged

    Russia’s malign behavior in the Black Sea includes piracy, plunder, petroleum price cap violations, and actions to prevent the free transit of foreign commercial and naval vessels. Its largely unchallenged position in the Black Sea also helps Russia maintain access to foreign-made products and components, circumventing sanctions. The West and the broader international community have yet to act to decisively rein in these flagrant violations of international laws and norms.

    September 8, 2023

    Can oil and water mix?: Creating opportunities for Iraq-Turkey cooperation
    Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Can oil and water mix?: Creating opportunities for Iraq-Turkey cooperation

    Last week saw a flurry of diplomatic activity between Baghdad and Ankara. The top priorities in the talks were oil exports, the presence of the PKK in Iraq, and Iraq’s water crisis. The outcomes have been unimpressive, but there is an opportunity for Iraq to shake things up and improve its bargaining position, at least on the oil export issue, possibly more.

    August 31, 2023

    Putting Egypt-Turkey relations on a sustainable footing
    Photo by Osmancan Gurdogan/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Putting Egypt-Turkey relations on a sustainable footing

    Turkey and Egypt, two influential regional players with a complex history of cooperation and conflict, are now working on mending their ruptured ties. As officials navigate this process, it is essential to identify practical steps to capitalize on the diplomatic breakthrough. Sustainable peace can only be ensured by shifting the focus from political ideology to shared interests. One way to do that is by creating an inclusive, multi-track process that involves state institutions, businesses, NGOs, academics, and the grassroots.

    August 29, 2023

    The Niger Coup and Turkey’s Military Industrial Complex in Africa
  • Commentary
  • The Niger Coup and Turkey’s Military Industrial Complex in Africa

    The recent military coup in Niger marks the point of no return for the unraveling of France’s dominant economic and military influence across West Africa. Turkey is the foreign actor that stands to benefit most, with the potential to emerge as a leading strategic partner for the nations of the region. Turkey’s engagement with West Africa is a unique, dual approach that blends military and economic engagement while deftly intertwining humanitarian aid and cultural outreach.

    Building back better with gender in mind: Centering Turkey’s women and girls in earthquake recovery
    Photo by Boris Roessler/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Building back better with gender in mind: Centering Turkey’s women and girls in earthquake recovery

    Gender-blind development policies leave women and girls behind and exacerbate their vulnerabilities before, during, and after disasters, as was made clear by the Feb. 6, 2023 earthquake that struck southeastern Turkey and northwestern Syria. By viewing disasters as gendered development problems, we can better understand the differential impact the Feb. 6 earthquake had on women and girls in Turkey and make more impactful policy recommendations.

    August 25, 2023

    Power cuts in Egypt: A political liability for Sisi ahead of the upcoming elections
    Islam Safwat/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Power cuts in Egypt: A political liability for Sisi ahead of the upcoming elections

    A brutal heat wave tormenting Egypt since mid-July, resulting in lengthy and repeated power cuts, has turned into a political liability for President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi ahead of his expected campaign to run for a third, six-year term early next year.

    August 18, 2023

    Impossible choices and routine tragedies: The Syrian refugee crisis at 13
    Photo by Ali Hashisho/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Impossible choices and routine tragedies: The Syrian refugee crisis at 13

    There are currently over 5.34 million Syrian refugees dispersed in camps, collective shelters, and poor neighborhoods across Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq, Jordan, and Egypt. Many make desperate attempts to find refuge in Europe. Instead of adopting repressive measures and discriminating against these individuals, the U.S. and European countries should work with regional partners and non-governmental organizations to limit the danger to refugees and IDPs.

    August 16, 2023

    The successes and failures of Turkey’s new economic team
    Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The successes and failures of Turkey’s new economic team

    It has been two months since Turkey’s new economic team took over and some progress has been made. Market normalization has begun and the risk of a balance-of-payments crisis has been reduced. At the same time, however, inflation is gaining new momentum, the budget deficit is sharply worsening, and no reform agenda has yet been announced to tackle these threats.

    August 14, 2023

    The Russia-Ukraine war forces Egypt to face the need to feed itself: Infrastructure, international partnerships, and agritech can provide the solutions
    Photo by Mahmoud Elkhwas/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Russia-Ukraine war forces Egypt to face the need to feed itself: Infrastructure, international partnerships, and agritech can provide the solutions

    After 500 days of coping with the debilitating impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Egypt’s economy is faltering. At the core of the crisis is its fragile food security. Now, the Egyptian economy is fast approaching a tipping point and Cairo has no alternative but to boost its domestic agrifood production. In addition to building out its infrastructure, Egypt must also adopt cutting-edge agritech solutions to improve the water-use efficiency of the crops themselves.

    Realigning priorities: Egypt's strategic shift toward Qatar, Turkey, and Iran
    Photo by Murat Kula/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Realigning priorities: Egypt's strategic shift toward Qatar, Turkey, and Iran

    While some analysts attribute Egypt’s realignment toward Turkey, Qatar, and Iran to a change in the foreign policies of its influential allies, the UAE and Saudi Arabia, it can be argued that Egypt’s shift is primarily motivated by its domestic dynamics and its unfulfilled foreign policy objectives between 2014 and 2018. Egypt’s realignment, in that sense, seeks to achieve multiple unmet domestic and regional aims.

    July 25, 2023

    Turkey's role after the Black Sea grain deal collapse has become even more critical
  • Commentary
  • Turkey's role after the Black Sea grain deal collapse has become even more critical

    During the 500 days since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Middle East avoided a catastrophic food crisis, thanks in part to the Black Sea grain initiative. Russia’s decision to cancel that agreement is raising fears that the return of supply shortages and skyrocketing wheat prices could quickly plunge the most vulnerable countries of the region into crisis.

    Climate Change Threatens Turkey’s Role as a Food Supplier to Europe and the Middle East
  • Commentary
  • Climate Change Threatens Turkey’s Role as a Food Supplier to Europe and the Middle East

    The persistence of high food inflation in Turkey belies a deeper problem. Turkish agrifood production cannot adequately cope with increasing water scarcity due to climate change. Challenging Turkey’s own food security, the growing crisis also threatens Turkey’s role as a food supplier to Europe and the Middle East. Regional food supply chain breakdowns due to a decline in Turkish production would create a debilitating economic impact on both regions.

    The new wave of dealmaking by Gulf sovereign wealth funds
    Photo by FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The new wave of dealmaking by Gulf sovereign wealth funds

    For resource-rich countries such as Gulf oil and natural gas producers, sovereign wealth funds have emerged as promising tools to save for future generations, mitigate the effects of outsized economic shocks, and/or be deployed as reserve investment and strategic development funds to spend on human, natural, social, and physical capital.