Skip to Content

Research & Commentary Results

Filter by
1422 Results
Forgotten Futures: History, Memoir, Afghanistan
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Forgotten Futures: History, Memoir, Afghanistan

    Originally posted December 2009

    In his book From My Memories, Khaled Sediq recounts the following incident from the mid-1960s regarding a visit by him and some other members of his family to Mohammad Zahir, King of Afghanistan from 1933 to 1973:

    Finally, after uttering some conventional statements, such as, Afghanistan belongs to you and you belong to Afghanistan, he also added: ‘Even though unpleasant events have happened, yet, I have forgotten about them, you, too, try to forget.’[1]

    February 2, 2010

    From Identity Crisis to Identity in Crisis in Afghanistan
  • Analysis
  • From Identity Crisis to Identity in Crisis in Afghanistan

    When social order is politically disturbed in a society like Afghanistan, inter- and intra-group dynamics set forces in motion that cannot be harnessed once unleashed. While group dynamics dictate, for instance, that majorities behave as an integrative and cohesive force as their sense of loyalty lies in the wellbeing of the collective whole, a minority’s interests may on occasion diverge in the pursuit of greener pastures across the fence, allowing themselves to be used as vulnerable pawns by others.

    December 16, 2009

    All Is Not Yet Lost
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • All Is Not Yet Lost

    This Commentary was originally published as an op-ed in The Washington Times on October 11, 2009.

    October 13, 2009

    The Kurdish Factor in Iran-Iraq Relations
  • Analysis
  • The Kurdish Factor in Iran-Iraq Relations

    Kurdish issues have been an important part of the myriad political and socioeconomic problems that have preoccupied the Islamic Republic of Iran since its inception. The Kurdish factor has also been an important determinant of Iran’s regional foreign policy in the past three decades. Shortly after the onset of the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-1988, the Iraqi government began to woo the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI) as potential leverage in its war effort.

    January 29, 2009

    Social Change Amidst Terror and Discrimination: Yezidis in the New Iraq
  • Analysis
  • Social Change Amidst Terror and Discrimination: Yezidis in the New Iraq

    Originally posted August 2008

    On August 14, 2007, in the largest single terror attack during the war in Iraq, over 350 Yezidis were killed and two entire villages completely destroyed, leaving over 1,000 families homeless. The two villages, Qahtaniya and Jazeera are located in the Sinjar Mountains, an area in northwestern Iraq that is hotly contested by Sunni Arab insurgents, Kurdish peshmergas, US-led coalition forces, and several minority groups.

    August 1, 2008

    Palestinian Refugees from Iraq in Critical Need of Protection
  • Analysis
  • Palestinian Refugees from Iraq in Critical Need of Protection

    Originally posted July 2008

    “The twice-displaced Palestinian refugees are one of the worst-off groups in a country full of desperate people. … They have no country to go to, no valid travel documents, no protectors inside Iraq, and hardly anyone prepared to support them outside either. … It is to everyone’s dishonor that these human beings are still rotting [in border camps] and — worst of all — in Baghdad where one or more is being murdered virtually every day.”1

    July 2, 2008

    Kirkuk: Constitutional Promises of Normalization, Census, and Referendum Still Unfulfilled
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Kirkuk: Constitutional Promises of Normalization, Census, and Referendum Still Unfulfilled

    Originally posted July 2008

    Many people view Kirkuk as a microcosm of all of Iraq. The ancient city counts among its inhabitants significant numbers of almost all of Iraq’s ethnic and religious groups — Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Sunnis, and Shi‘ites. The last semi-reliable census of Kirkuk’s population, from 1957, indicated a slight majority of Turkmen in Kirkuk City and a majority of Kurds, followed by Arabs, in the province as a whole.

    July 1, 2008