Content

MENASource

Aug 10, 2020

For Lebanon, the only way out is either revolution or reform

By Nabeel Khoury

The ingredients for Lebanese reform are there. However, it remains a cause that awaits the right champion.

Lebanon Middle East

In the News

Aug 9, 2020

Slavin quoted in The Hill on the arms embargo on Iran

Financial Sanctions and Economic Coercion Iran

MENASource

Aug 7, 2020

Ammonium nitrate didn’t belong to Hezbollah, but they knew about its dangers

By David Daoud

Hezbollah is acutely aware of the danger that such chemicals—even if not of a military grade—pose to nearby civilians, perhaps more so than any other entity in Lebanon.

Lebanon Middle East

In the News

Aug 7, 2020

Dagres joins the Monocle’s “The Briefing” to discuss UN arms embargo

Arms Control Financial Sanctions and Economic Coercion

In the News

Aug 6, 2020

Lipner quoted in Jewish Insider on Naftali Bennett’s rise

Israel Politics & Diplomacy

In the News

Aug 5, 2020

Fontenrose joins Newsy to discuss Beirut explosion

Lebanon Resilience & Society

MENASource

Aug 5, 2020

Jordan protests met with repression as government changes tactics

By Tuqa Nusairat

The Jordanian government must make a concerted effort to address the serious economic challenges and disparities that have marginalized a majority of Jordanians with little options left but to strike or protest the conditions they face.

Middle East Politics & Diplomacy

In the News

Aug 5, 2020

Ullman in UPI: 30 years ago, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait

By Harlan Ullman

Middle East Politics & Diplomacy

New Atlanticist

Aug 4, 2020

Scenes from a broken Beirut

By Nicholas Blanford

My apartment was heavily damaged by the explosion. All the windows were gone, the frames blasted out, even on the other side of the building from the explosion. I spoke to friends and colleagues in the area. They all have tales about calamities, material and personal, that have befallen them.

Lebanon Middle East

MENASource

Aug 4, 2020

Three years after the Caliphate, Iraq’s Christians find little incentive to return

By Paul Gadalla

The region’s few remaining Christians find themselves caught between Iran-backed Shia militias and an Iraqi government that, nearly twenty years after the American invasion, is politically paralyzed and still unable to provide basic security and services—let alone protect the country’s embattled minority populations.

Iraq Middle East

Experts

Events