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Amid renewed protests and political maneuvering, the odds of early elections in Israel are rising
Photo by Eyal Warshavsky/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Amid renewed protests and political maneuvering, the odds of early elections in Israel are rising

    Public opinion polls indicate that a plurality of Israelis have lost faith in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and support early elections. Recently, this trend has been coupled with renewed demonstrations against the government and maneuvers by key politicians, indicating that the chances Israelis will go to the polls during 2024 are on the rise.

    March 29, 2024

    Strategic foresight is helping create Arab futures
    Arab Forum for Sustainable Development
  • Commentary
  • Strategic foresight is helping create Arab futures

    On March 5-7, 2024, the United Nations’ Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) hosted the annual Arab Forum for Sustainable Development (AFSD). The inclusion of a special session on “Collaborative Futures: Strategic Foresight for Sustainable Development in a World of Crisis” is another example of the growing attention to foresight-driven analysis and decision-making among leaders in the Arab world.

    March 28, 2024

    The establishment strikes back in Pakistan
    Photo by Pakistan Prime Minister Office/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The establishment strikes back in Pakistan

    The newly formed government coalition in Islamabad initially looked weak, unstable, and probably short lived. But in the weeks since the outcome of the vote was announced, the political landscape has rapidly changed. Nevertheless, there are portents of trouble ahead that could send Pakistan back into the political tangle from which it has so recently emerged.

    Iran bites its tongue on Bahrain?
    ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran bites its tongue on Bahrain?

    On March 12, the United States Department of the Treasury sanctioned four individuals for supporting the Iran-linked al-Ashtar Brigades in Bahrain. This US announcement might suggest that Iranian-Bahraini relations are about to take a nose-dive. But in reality, that is unlikely to happen — at least not while Iranian-Saudi détente continues.

    The great financing gap: The state of climate funding in MENA
    Photo by FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The great financing gap: The state of climate funding in MENA

    The Middle East and North Africa region is one of the lowest recipients of climate finance compared to other areas of the globe, such as East Asia and the Pacific Islands, despite MENA’s exposure to extreme climate risks. The MENA region’s share of climate financing from the big three global climate funds — the Green Climate Fund (GCF), the Climate Investment Funds (CIF), and the Global Environment Facility (GEF) — and their sub-funds made up only 6.6% of their cumulative global financing through 2023.

    March 22, 2024

    Israel and China: A time for choosing?
    ETIENNE OLIVEAU/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Israel and China: A time for choosing?

    Over the past two decades, relations between Israel and China expanded significantly. Since then, however, there have been indications that the growth prospects for the bilateral relationship have diminished. China’s stance on the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack and on Israel’s conduct during the ensuing war in Gaza, in particular, has further cast doubt on the future trajectory of the relationship.

    A better development funding model for Lebanon: Prospects, challenges, and applicable lessons
    Photo by PATRICK BAZ/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • A better development funding model for Lebanon: Prospects, challenges, and applicable lessons

    International funders have often called upon recipients to carry out reforms before any funding can be made available or the amount increased. But in many crisis-wracked countries, such as Lebanon, the prospect of reforms may be too distant, with intervention needed immediately. This is why greater emphasis must be placed on risk mitigation measures over which funders can exercise control.

    March 18, 2024

    Women’s rights under the Taliban: The socio-economic consequences of political exclusion
    Photo by OMER ABRAR / AFP
  • Analysis
  • Women’s rights under the Taliban: The socio-economic consequences of political exclusion

    One of the first things the Taliban did after capturing power in August 2021 was to abolish the Afghan Ministry of Women’s Affairs and re-establish the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice. The environment within which Afghan girls and women had found avenues of employment, education, and empowerment over the previous two decades had been lost. Many families now had to deal with acute poverty, mental health issues, and even suicides.

    March 7, 2024

    History rewrite: Did Saddam try to kill Bush?
    Photo by Diana Walker/Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • History rewrite: Did Saddam try to kill Bush?

    In his new book, Steve Coll casts doubt on whether Iraqi intelligence had actually tried to assassinate former President George H. W. Bush in Kuwait in April 1993. If the Kuwait plot were a fabrication, it would fit yet another brick in the wall of many well documented falsehoods and misunderstandings that led to the US invasion. Unfortunately for that allegation, the plot was very likely to have been quite real.

    March 5, 2024

    Are Iran and Turkey on a collision course over West Azerbaijan?
    Photo by ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Are Iran and Turkey on a collision course over West Azerbaijan?

    Over the centuries, Iran and Turkey have engaged in an ebbing and flowing, but continual, rivalry for regional influence and supremacy. Yet such potentially escalatory dynamics have not been limited to geopolitical competition by proxy; they have also spilled over into efforts to meddle in each other’s internal affairs.

    February 27, 2024

    “Exporting its internal problems”: Understanding Iran’s January missile salvos against its neighbors
    Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • “Exporting its internal problems”: Understanding Iran’s January missile salvos against its neighbors

    In mid-January, with the war in Gaza continuing to rage on, Iran launched a series of surprise missile attacks on its immediate neighbors Iraq, Syria, and Pakistan over two days. Taken together, these attacks illustrate that the Islamic Republic puts regime survival above national interest in its foreign policy calculations, which undermines its efforts to engender solidarity and good relations with other Muslim-majority states in the region.

    February 23, 2024

    What’s next for Pakistan after election shock?
  • Podcast
  • What’s next for Pakistan after election shock?

    On this week’s episode Tamkinet Karim, Syed Mohammad Ali, and Alistair Taylor discuss the results of Pakistan’s Feb. 8 elections and where things might be headed moving forward. Over the past two years, Pakistan has gone through a particularly turbulent period, following the removal of Imran Khan’s government in a no-confidence vote in April 2022 — a time marked by political instability, intense polarization, a worsening economic crisis, and growing threats to internal security.

    February 21, 2024

    Pakistan’s election and what’s next?
    Photo by AAMIR QURESHI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pakistan’s election and what’s next?

    Contrary to what many political observers predicted, Pakistan’s general election on Feb. 8 delivered many surprises and ushered in an even higher level of political uncertainty than what already prevailed. And with the current formation of the new coalition government, an end to political volatility doesn’t seem to be in sight.

    February 21, 2024