Skip to main content
معهد واشنطن لسياسات الشرق الأدنى
Menu
Toggle Main Menu
Homepage
Main navigation
تحليل
الخبراء
حول المعهد
الدعم
الخرائط والوسائط المتعددة
الأكثر شيوعاً:
الديمقراطية والإصلاح
الإرهاب
لبنان
إيران
إسرائيل
سوريا
Toggle List of
جميع المناطق
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
Close List of All Regions and Issues
Close
ابحث في تحليل السياسات
TWI English
TWI Arabic:
اللغة العربية
Fikra Forum
Close Menu
Close
ابحث في تحليل السياسات
Search
Policy Analysis
Filter by:
Keyword
Region
- Any -
مصر
دول الخليج العربي
إيران
العراق
إسرائيل
الأردن
لبنان
الشرق الأوسط
شمال أفريقيا
الفلسطينيون
سوريا
تركيا
Issue
- Any -
السياسة العربية والإسلامية
العلاقات العربية الإسرائيلية
الديمقراطية والإصلاح
الطاقة والاقتصاد
منافسة القوى العظمى
الخليج وسياسة الطاقة
الشؤون العسكرية والأمنية
عملية السلام
انتشار الأسلحة
الإرهاب
السياسة الأمريكية
Media type
- Any -
Audio
Maps & Graphics
Multimedia
Video
تاريخ النشر
- Any -
Past 7 Days
Past 30 Days
Past Year
Custom range...
Start date
End date
Type
- Any -
مقالات وشهادة
تحليل موجز
تقارير متعمقة
Sort by
Oldest first
Newest first
Found
11677
results
Brief Analysis
Arab Gulf Politics and Powell's Visit
As Secretary of State Colin Powell and former President George Bush celebrate the tenth anniversary of the liberation of Kuwait, for many Gulf Arabs the occasion marks a decade since Saddam Husayn's tanks put the lie to the promises of security that local leaders had made to their people. After
٢٦/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
Simon Henderson
Brief Analysis
The GCC Militaries since Desert Storm:
An Assessment
When Secretary of State Colin Powell and former President George Bush touch down in Kuwait on Sunday, celebrations scheduled to commemorate the expulsion of Saddam Husayn’s forces ten years ago will also—albeit less explicitly—recognize the more robust state of Gulf militaries. A decade after Operation Desert Storm, each of the
٢٢/٠٢/٢٠٠١
Brief Analysis
Powell to the Middle East:
Assessing the Key Elements of Iraq Policy
On February 26, U.S. secretary of state Colin Powell begins his tour of Iraq's Arab neighbors just as UN secretary-general Kofi Annan is scheduled to hold discussions with Iraqi foreign minister Mohammad Said al-Sahhaf in New York. Key themes in these meetings will be the return of UN weapons inspectors
٢٠/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
Patrick Clawson
Brief Analysis
Arab Reactions to Sharon's Victory in the Israeli Election
Arab reactions to Ariel Sharon's overwhelming victory in the recent Israeli national election were mixed. Some condemned him with a confrontational tone, while some suggested that the election made no difference — that is, that all Israeli leaders have basically the same stance. Several Arab leaders opted to take a
١٦/٠٢/٢٠٠١
Articles & Testimony
Avoiding the Mideast:
Never a Real Option
There is a growing belief in some foreign policy circles that four months of violence and Ariel Sharon's landslide victory in Israel last week are further proof that former president Bill Clinton's proposals for a Middle East peace failed miserably, and that the Bush administration should absolve itself of the
١١/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
David Makovsky
Brief Analysis
Inside Palestinian Politics:
Preparing for Israel under Sharon
As Ariel Sharon prepares to take power following his landslide victory, significant changes are also underway in the Palestinian Authority (PA). In anticipation of Sharon's victory, the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) and leading PA personalities have been preparing a new political agenda to deal with the apparent end of "final
٠٨/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
David Schenker
Articles & Testimony
Despite Pan Am Verdict, Libya Is Still a Threat
After 12 years of legal and political maneuverings, a Scottish tribunal convicted a Libyan intelligence agent of mass murder. The unexpected verdict has not only brought a measure of justice to the families of Pan Am Flight 103, but also has made Libya the first national security challenge for the
٠٧/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
Ray Takeyh
Brief Analysis
Sharon's Victory:
Implications for the Peace Process and U.S. Policy
Meaning of the ElectionThe Israeli people spoke in the most dramatic and convincing fashion. Viewed in the U.S. context, Ariel Sharon won a larger share of the vote 62.5 percent than any presidential candidate in history. Essentially, Israel voted to express one word: "enough!" enough violence, enough concessions, enough perception
٠٧/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
Robert Satloff
Brief Analysis
The 'al-Aqsa Intifada' and the Prospects for a Wider Arab-Israeli War
Palestinian officials have threatened an intensification of violence, should -- as is expected -- Ariel Sharon be elected prime minister of Israel tomorrow. The Palestinian leadership that "rewarded" Prime Minister Ehud Barak's diplomatic flexibility with the "al-Aqsa Intifada" thus seems poised to "punish" the Israeli public for electing Sharon with
٠٥/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
Michael Eisenstadt
Articles & Testimony
No Feelings of Guilt or Remorse for Lockerbie
More than twelve years after Pan Am 103 exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, the striking point about the most expensive and elaborate trial in British legal history is its complete irrelevance, despite the conviction of a Libyan intelligence agent. Libya had negotiated such advantageous legal procedures that, regardless of the verdict
٠٥/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
Ray Takeyh
Brief Analysis
Behind a Looming Sharon Victory
The deadline has now passed for Ehud Barak to step aside in favor of rival Shimon Peres in Israel's prime ministerial face-off next Tuesday, February 6, against Likud leader MK Ariel Sharon. Analysts have already written off this election for Barak, as Sharon's lead in the polls has barely budged
٠٢/٠٢/٢٠٠١
◆
David Makovsky
Articles & Testimony
Sanctions on Iraq:
Curtains for the Ba'ath
. . . The shortcomings of containment go beyond questions of sustainability, or the risks of complacency. Containment requires an onerous forward U.S. military presence in the region that is clearly counterproductive politically for the United States. And to the degree that sanctions contribute to a sense of Arab/Muslim grievance
٠١/٠٢/٢٠٠١
Scattered Pieces, Shattered Peace
٠١/٠٢/٢٠٠١
Brief Analysis
Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD):
An Emerging Challenge for the Bush Administration
Iraq and its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) are emerging as one of the first major foreign policy challenges of the Bush administration. Free of weapons monitors and with sanctions eroding, Iraq has resumed its aggressive policies. After the start of the al-Aqsa Intifada last September, it briefly moved elements
٢٩/٠١/٢٠٠١
◆
Michael Eisenstadt
Brief Analysis
Imagining a Likud Foreign Policy
Regional TrendsFebruary marks ten years since the end of the Gulf War. The situation in the Middle East today is vastly more dangerous than in 1991. The favorable regional conditions in 1991 that allowed the current peace process to begin have been reversed. Three key trends are the following: After
٢٩/٠١/٢٠٠١
◆
Dore Gold
Brief Analysis
Bahrain’s National Charter and Political Reform in the Gulf
Bahraini Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Issa al-Khalifa announced January 23 that a national referendum will be held February 14-15 on a National Charter, under which the lower house of a national assembly would be elected in 2004. Sheikh Hamads reformist moves are the latest example of a trend in the
٢٥/٠١/٢٠٠١
Brief Analysis
Syria’s Foreign Policy Challenges U.S. Interests
This is the second of a two-part series marking the six months since Bashar al-Asad became president of Syria on July 17, 2000. Read Part I. For a region used to the late Hafiz al-Asad’s stodgy predictability, his son Bashar’s six-month-old presidency has displayed a surprisingly active foreign policy, including
١٩/٠١/٢٠٠١
◆
Alan Makovsky
Brief Analysis
Syria under Bashar al-Asad:
The Domestic Scene and the 'Chinese Model' of Reform
This is the first of a two-part series marking the six months since Bashar al-Asad became president of Syria on July 17, 2000. Read Part II. On January 11, a petition signed by a thousand Syrian intellectuals appeared in the Lebanese press demanding -- inter alia -- freedom of expression
١٧/٠١/٢٠٠١
◆
Alan Makovsky
Brief Analysis
The Gulf Cooperation Council Defense Pact:
An Exercise in Ambiguity
January 17 marks the tenth anniversary of the start of Operation Desert Storm in the Middle East, when U.S.-led forces began the liberation of Kuwait. In that operation, the militaries of the Gulf monarchies played a minor role. At their meeting in Bahrain at the end of December, the leaders
١٦/٠١/٢٠٠١
◆
Simon Henderson
Articles & Testimony
Racing against the Clock
The formative years of Ehud Barak's career in the military were as a phenomenal soldier and as the head of Israel's sayeret matkal, the country's elite commando force. With a reputation as strong as it is secret, the sayeret is often obliquely called by its nickname, simply ha'yehida — "the
١٥/٠١/٢٠٠١
◆
David Makovsky
Pagination
Previous page
‹‹
First page
« First
…
Page
532
Page
533
Page
534
Page
535
Current page
536
Page
537
Page
538
Page
539
Page
540
…
Last page
Last »
Next page
››