How Gaza Reunited the Middle East
A new Pan-Islamic front may be America’s biggest challenge. Read More Here
A new Pan-Islamic front may be America’s biggest challenge. Read More Here
Even a Saudi push fails to give dormant peace proposal new life as Netanyahu seems content to wait out Biden and deal with Trump. Read More Here
Riyadh might have a great deal of influence over the future of Israel and Palestine, but it is waiting for a genuine and viable peace process. Read More Here
Support Is falling for America and the two-state solution—but rising for Iran and violent resistance. Read More Here
Kingdom’s offer hinges on Iran reining in its regional proxies even as Riyadh also works with US and Arab allies to contain Tehran. Read More Here
The war in Gaza will likely reinforce the country’s rightward tilt. Read More Here
Internal dynamics restrict Cairo’s options for involvement in a post-Hamas Gaza. Read More Here
The war in Gaza, American overstretch, and the case for retrenchment. Read More Here
Two things have been constant throughout Netanyahu’s long stint in power. He is notoriously indecisive, especially when it comes to military and security matters, and he is obsessed with his political survival. Those characteristics coloured his approach to hostage diplomacy, and to the broader war in Gaza. Read More Here
Hamas is a Cold War creation and was founded by Sheikh Ahmed Yassin (and funded by Israel) in 1987, at the start of the First Intifada, to oppose the secular, nationalist Fatah organization, run by Yasser Arafat. The group is an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood. Read More Here Also Read: The Ghosts of Lebanon