Skip to main content
TWI logo معهد واشنطن لسياسات الشرق الأدنى
logo
wordmark
Homepage

Main navigation

  • تحليل
  • الخبراء
  • حول المعهد
  • الدعم
  • الخرائط والوسائط المتعددة
الأكثر شيوعاً:
  • الديمقراطية والإصلاح
  • الإرهاب
/
  • لبنان
  • إيران
  • إسرائيل
  • سوريا

المناطق والبلدان

  • إسرائيل
  • إيران
  • الأردن
  • الشرق الأوسط
  • العراق
  • الفلسطينيون
  • تركيا
  • دول الخليج العربي
  • سوريا
  • شمال أفريقيا
  • لبنان
  • مصر

القضايا

  • الإرهاب
  • الخليج وسياسة الطاقة
  • الديمقراطية والإصلاح
  • السياسة الأمريكية
  • السياسة العربية والإسلامية
  • الشؤون العسكرية والأمنية
  • الطاقة والاقتصاد
  • العلاقات العربية الإسرائيلية
  • انتشار الأسلحة
  • عملية السلام
  • منافسة القوى العظمى
TWI English
TWI Arabic: اللغة العربية Fikra Forum

الشؤون العسكرية والأمنية

Policy Analysis on الشؤون العسكرية والأمنية

Filter by:

Brief Analysis
Iran:
Shaking Up the High Command
An ongoing series of shake-ups at the highest levels of the Iranian military and intelligence communities suggest that Iran's new President, Hojjat-ol Islam Mohammed Khatami, may be moving to exert control over the hardline defense establishment. In recent days he has reshuffled the leadership in the Defense Ministry, the Intelligence
٠١‏/١٠‏/١٩٩٧
◆
  • Kenneth Pollack
Brief Analysis
Israel and the Palestinian Authority:
Edging toward the Abyss?
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright's visit this week to the Middle East may be the last chance for the United States to avert a potential drift toward armed confrontation between Israel and the Palestinian Authority (PA), due to the latter's failure to mount a sustained effort to halt terrorism by
١١‏/٠٩‏/١٩٩٧
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
Turkish-Israeli Military Cooperation:
An Assessment
The deepening military relationship between Israel and Turkey has heightened Arab and Iranian concerns about the potential implications of this new axis between the two most powerful states in the region. Though these anxieties seem exaggerated, it is animated by a fear that this thus far limited relationship could eventually
٢٤‏/٠٧‏/١٩٩٧
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
Israeli Security, the Peace Process, and the U.S.-Israel Partnership
Netanyahu's Victory, One Year Later: When the Labor government was in power, it was legitimate to ask whether it is adequate to have a majority which supports the peace agreements even if it does not include the majority of the Jewish population. It is important to remember that the peace
١٠‏/٠٦‏/١٩٩٧
Brief Analysis
Israel and the Palestinian Authority:
The Security Agenda
As the stand-off over Har Homa continues, Israeli leaders and commentators are increasingly calling for a shake-up of the incremental Oslo process and an immediate move to substantive "final status" talks. According to this argument, leapfrogging over the rest of the "interim phase" has the benefit of avoiding a series
٢٠‏/٠٣‏/١٩٩٧
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
Why Saudi Arabia Is Too Important an Ally to Get 100 F-16s
Saudi Arabia has gotten a lot of negative attention in recent months. The Saudis have been blamed for failing to pay sufficient attention to homegrown dissidents, contributing to American deaths in terrorist attacks in Riyadh and Dhahran. King Fahd's stroke in late 1995 prompted speculation that a succession crisis loomed
١٣‏/٠٢‏/١٩٩٧
◆
  • Kenneth Pollack
Articles & Testimony
Target Iraq's Republican Guard
America's inability to devise an effective response to Saddam Husayn's recent reassertion of government control over parts of northern Iraq has spurred calls for a reassessment of Washington's policy toward Baghdad. Some analysts call for the breakup of Iraq, to end the threat Saddam poses to the region and to
٠١‏/١٢‏/١٩٩٦
In-Depth Reports
Israel and the Gulf:
New Security Frameworks for the Middle East
The 1991 Gulf War and the post-war Arab-Israeli peace process fundamentally altered the relationship between the Levant and the Persian Gulf and prompted widespread regional and international interest in new security frameworks for the Middle East. Various existing proposals reveal divergent national positions on the future shape and boundaries of
٠١‏/١١‏/١٩٩٦
◆
  • Dore Gold
Brief Analysis
The U.S. Strikes on Iraq:
What Was Accomplished? What Next?
The U.S. cruise missile strikes on Iraqi air defense forces yesterday and today were intended to have three main consequences: 1) to exact a price for the Iraqi army's actions in Irbil and thereby restore credibility to U.S. deterrence; 2) to degrade Iraqi air defenses in the newly extended no-fly
٠٤‏/٠٩‏/١٩٩٦
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt
In-Depth Reports
Iranian Military Power:
Capabilities and Intentions
In 1989, following a costly eight-year war with Iraq, Iran initiated a major military build-up intended to rebuild, expand, and modernize its ravaged armed forces and thereby transform itself into a regional military power. Iran's quest for nuclear weapons, its naval build-up in the Persian Gulf, its efforts to undermine
٠١‏/٠٨‏/١٩٩٦
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
Hizballah Operations:
Past Patterns, Future Prospects
An attack by Hizballah on an outpost of the South Lebanon Army last week underscores both the positive and negative outcomes of the written "understanding" negotiated by Secretary of State Warren Christopher -- namely, while northern Israel and Lebanese civilian targets should be spared further attacks, armed conflict between Israel
٠٧‏/٠٥‏/١٩٩٦
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
The Future of U.S.-Israel Strategic Cooperation
On April 24, 1996, Shai Feldman, senior research fellow at the John F. Kennedy School of Government's Center for Science and International Affairs, presented the findings of his Washington Institute study The Future of U.S.-Israel Strategic Cooperation at the Institute's Special Policy Forum. Zalmay Khalilzad, director of the Strategy and
٠٢‏/٠٥‏/١٩٩٦
In-Depth Reports
The Future of U.S.-Israel Strategic Cooperation
Executive Summary In the 1970s, the establishment of U.S.-Israel strategic ties was driven less by America's perceived strategic imperatives than by political motivations: the values shared by the United States and Israel, the cultural proximity between the two societies, the unique role and influence of the American Jewish community, and
٠١‏/٠٥‏/١٩٩٦
Articles & Testimony
Still Not Bomb-Proof
Five years after Operation Desert Storm, Iraq once again may not be far from producing an atomic bomb. With its known nuclear infrastructure largely dismantled, restrictive sanctions greatly complicating the acquisition of sensitive technology abroad and scores of UN weapons inspectors combing the countryside, how can this be? The fact
٢٦‏/٠٢‏/١٩٩٦
Brief Analysis
Proliferation and Theater Missile Defense:
The Middle East
On July 13, 1995, Lt. General Malcolm R. O'Neill, director of the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, addressed a session of the The Washington Institute's Policy Forum on U.S. theater missile defense and missile proliferation in the Middle East. The following is a rapporteur's summary of his remarks. The Threat of
١٣‏/٠٧‏/١٩٩٥
Brief Analysis
President Mubarak's Visit and the Middle East Nuclear Debate
As Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak opens his talks in Washington, his government's approach to the extension of the 1968 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) is likely to be high on the agenda. Egypt's position is that it will not support the NPT's indefinite extension if Israel does not sign the treaty
٠٥‏/٠٤‏/١٩٩٥
In-Depth Reports
Intelligence and the Middle East:
What Do We Need To Know?
Preface In the post-Cold War era and with the emergence of new security challenges to U.S. interests around the globe, the U.S. intelligence community has come under intense scrutiny. Indeed, the principal mission of the newly-established Presidential Commission on Roles and Capabilities of the U.S. Intelligence Community -- whose ranks
٠١‏/٠٤‏/١٩٩٥
◆
  • Ellen Laipson
Brief Analysis
Nuclear Politics in the Middle East
On Thursday, March 23, 1995, Institute Senior Fellow Michael Eisenstadt and Visiting Fellow Shai Feldman delivered Policy Forum presentations on developments in nuclear proliferation and nuclear arms control efforts in the Middle East. The following is a rapporteur's report of their comments. Michael Eisenstadt Nuclear arms control is likely to
٢٣‏/٠٣‏/١٩٩٥
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
Iran's Naval Buildup in the Gulf:
An Assessment
While Iran's recent nuclear deal with Russia has attracted world attention, Tehran has in the past few months bolstered its military presence on the strategic Persian Gulf island of Abu Musa, raising new questions about its intentions and heightening concerns about Iranian policy in the Gulf. Iran's Naval Buildup Since
٠٨‏/٠٣‏/١٩٩٥
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
Iraq's Military Capabilities:
An Assessment
The crisis along the Iraq-Kuwait border underscores Saddam Hussein's ability to reconstruct a formidable military force despite Iraq's crushing military defeat in Desert Storm and four years of sanctions. Nevertheless, Iraq's military is much smaller and less powerful than the force the U.S. faced in 1991. Iraqi capabilities Today, Iraq
١٤‏/١٠‏/١٩٩٤
◆
  • Michael Eisenstadt

Pagination

  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • First page « First
  • …
  • Page 145
  • Page 146
  • Page 147
  • Page 148
  • Page 149
  • Current page 150
  • Page 151
  • Page 152
  • Page 153
  • Last page Last »
  • Next page Next ›
Supported by the

Military and Security Studies Program

The Washington Institute's Military and Security Studies Program has established itself as an unrivaled source of reliable, incisive, and forward-looking analysis concerning several of the most critical national-security challenges facing the United States today: The U.S. military role in the Middle East, Iran's nuclear program and its proxy armies, the ongoing conflict is in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen, the regional proliferation of missiles and weapons of mass destruction, the security dimensions of the Arab-Israeli conflict, and many other security issues on the frontline of the U.S. policymaking agenda.

Sign Up for Email Updates from The Washington Institute

Never miss a breaking event on U.S. policy interests in the Middle East. Customize your subscription to our expert analysis, op-eds, live events, and special reports.

Sign up

Featured experts

Michael Eisenstadt
مايكل آيزنشتات
مايكل آيزنشتات هو زميل أقدم في برنامج الزمالة "كاهن" ومدير "برنامج الدراسات العسكرية والأمنية" في معهد واشنطن، وهو متخصص في شؤون الخليج العربي والشؤون الأمنية العربية - الإسرائيلية.
Michael Knights
مايكل نايتس
الدكتور مايكل نايتس هو زميل أقدم في برنامج الزمالة "جيل وجاي برنشتاين" في معهد واشنطن، ومتخصص في الشؤون العسكرية والأمنية للعراق وإيران ودول الخليج العربي وهو أحد مؤسسي منصة "الأضواء الكاشفة للميليشيات"، التي تقدم تحليلاً متعمقاً للتطورات المتعلقة بالميليشيات المدعومة من إيران في العراق وسوريا. وقد شارك في تأليف دراسة المعهد لعام 2020 "التكريم من دون الاحتواء: مستقبل «الحشد الشعبي» في العراق".
Grant Rumley
غرانت روملي
غرانت روملي هو زميل أقدم في برنامج الزمالة "ميزل غولدبرغر" في "برنامج مؤسسة دايين وغيلفورد غليزر حول منافسة القوى العظمى والشرق الأوسط" التابع لمعهد واشنطن، حيث يتخصص في الشؤون العسكرية والأمنية في الشرق الأوسط.
Elizabeth Dent - source: The Washington Institute
إليزابيث دينت
إليزابيث دينت هي زميلة أقدم في معهد واشنطن لسياسة الشرق الأدنى، حيث تركز على السياسة الخارجية والدفاعية الأمريكية تجاه دول الخليج العربي والعراق وسوريا.
Background image with TWI branding
logo
wordmark
Homepage

1111 19th Street NW - Suite 500
Washington D.C. 20036
Tel: 202-452-0650
Fax: 202-223-5364

Footer contact links

  • الاتصال بالمعهد
  • غرفة الصحافة
  • الاشتراك

معهد واشنطن يسعى إلى تعزيز فهم متوازن وواقعي للمصالح الأمريكية في الشرق الأوسط والنهوض بالسياسات التي تؤمّنها.

المعهد هو منظمة 501(c)3 ؛ جميع التبرعات معفاة من الضرائب.

Footer quick links

  • حول معهد واشنطن
  • ادعم المعهد
  • روّاد المعهد

Social media

  • The Washington Institute on Facebook facebook
  • The Washington Institute on X x
  • The Washington Institute on YouTube youtube
  • The Washington Institute on LinkedIn linkedin

© 2025 جميع الحقوق محفوظة.

Footer

  • توظيف
  • نهج الخصوصية
  • الحقوق والأذونات