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Brief Analysis
The Egypt Speech:
Obama's Watershed Moment
PolicyWatch #1522 is the first in a two-part series on President Obama's trip to Egypt on June 4 and focuses on the president's much-anticipated speech to the "Muslim world." Part two will examine the likely impact of the visit on U.S.-Egyptian relations. On June 4, President Barack Obama will give
May 29, 2009
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J. Scott Carpenter
Brief Analysis
Stabilizing Iraq:
Intelligence Lessons for Afghanistan
After the U.S. initiation of hostilities in Iraq in 2003, Washington's focus shifted away from the conflict in Afghanistan. Until recently, U.S. policy focused on winning the war in Iraq while securing an apparent coalition victory in Afghanistan. Although this policy yielded positive results in Iraq, it led to drift
May 28, 2009
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Barry Harris
Articles & Testimony
Moderates at Risk in Election
Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.'s visit to Beirut last week underscored the enormous stake America has in parliamentary elections that Lebanon will hold June 7. The country's governing majority -- moderate, pro-Western, supported by Washington -- is running neck and neck with a coalition dominated by Hezbollah, the militant
May 28, 2009
Articles & Testimony
The Leveretts Get Iran All Wrong
Just as he is being criticized by those to his right for his emphasis on engagement with Iran, President Obama came under attack from the left, in the op-ed pages of the May 23 New York Times, for just the opposite. Unlike critics from the right who largely concur with
May 27, 2009
Brief Analysis
Fayad's New Government:
Implications and Challenges
Just prior to his May 28 visit to Washington, Palestinian Authority (PA) president Mahmoud Abbas reappointed Dr. Salam Fayad as PA prime minister. Although Fayad headed an interim government since his resignation on March 7, his formal reappointment carries with it important changes to the composition of the government. Signaling
May 22, 2009
◆
Mohammad Yaghi
Articles & Testimony
In Love with Arab Islamists
For so long, I have argued that the AKP's foreign policy is Islamist. Well, I stand corrected: the AKP's foreign policy does not have a generic Islamist tinge; rather the party is infatuated with Arab Islamist causes. In the past, Turkey's foreign policy makers were educated in Western or secular
May 21, 2009
Brief Analysis
The Obama-Netanyahu Meeting:
Analysis and Assessment
This week's White House meeting between President Barack Obama and Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu was both uneventful and momentous -- and because of this, its ramifications are likely to ripple throughout U.S. and Middle East politics far into the future. Unmet Expectations of Conflict The party most upset by
May 21, 2009
◆
Robert Satloff
Brief Analysis
Intelligence Transformation: Meeting New Challenges in the Middle East and Beyond
An inside look at how the U.S. intelligence community has adapted to meet new threats in the Bush and Obama administrations.
May 21, 2009
◆
James R. Clapper, Jr.
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Counterterrorism Lecture Series
In-Depth Reports
Engaging Iran:
Lessons from the Past
In the thirty years since Iran's Islamic Revolution, which resulted in the overthrow of the Iranian monarchy and the creation of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Western governments have repeatedly tried to engage Tehran. This collection of essays, the product of a special colloquium hosted by The Washington Institute in
May 20, 2009
◆
Patrick Clawson
Articles & Testimony
Stopping an Iranian Bomb
Hanging over yesterday's meeting between President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was one overriding question: Can the president's strategy of diplomatic engagement persuade Iran to cease its efforts to develop nuclear weapons? Unfortunately, history offers little cause for hope -- especially if the United States remains focused on
May 19, 2009
Articles & Testimony
Behind Turkey's Witch Hunt
In which country does a liberal woman who educates poor girls worry about her safety when she goes home at night? Pakistan, Afghanistan -- right -- but also add Turkey now. In an early-morning raid on April 13, Turkish police arrested more than a dozen middle-aged liberal women working for
May 16, 2009
Brief Analysis
Are Obama and Netanyahu Destined to Clash?
On Monday, May 18, U.S. president Barack Obama will host Israeli prime minister and Likud leader Binyamin (Bibi) Netanyahu at the White House for their first meeting since the new Israeli government was formed six weeks ago. Some observers predict that, sooner or later, the two are bound to collide
May 15, 2009
◆
David Makovsky
Brief Analysis
Will Russia Help the United States with Iran?
Russia's recent decision not to sell the S-300 antiaircraft missile system to Iran (at least for now) raised hopes that Moscow would cooperate more fully in the effort to prevent Tehran from developing nuclear weapons. Recent statements from Russian leaders indicating that they were on board with the U.S. strategy
May 13, 2009
Articles & Testimony
The Battle for Turkey's Soul: Elites vs. the West
Turkey is an elite project; historically, large elite groups, i.e., mega elites constituting sizeable portions of the society, have led Turkey toward their own societal values and foreign policy choices. This was the case during the Ottoman Empire, the Republican era, and, today, with the ruling Justice and Development Party
May 13, 2009
Brief Analysis
Populism, Authoritarianism, and National Security in al-Maliki's Iraq
An April 26 U.S. raid targeting a Jaish al-Mahdi (JAM) financier in the Iraqi city of Kut, which inadvertently killed a civilian and a policeman, may mark the first of a series of tests for the Security Agreement between the United States and the Iraqi government. Iraqi prime minister Nouri
May 12, 2009
◆
Michael Eisenstadt
Articles & Testimony
The Pharaoh Strikes Back:
Egypt vs. Hezbollah
Anyone who has watched an Arab summit knows that the Middle East is racked with divisions. The highlight reel from the March 2009 Doha summit leads with a lengthy ad hominem attack by Libya's leader Muammar Qaddafi against Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, so severe that the Qatari hosts cut the
May 11, 2009
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David Schenker
Brief Analysis
Assessing Progress against the Global Jihadist Threat
In April 2009, the U.S. State Department and the European Union released their annual terrorism reports, which paint a varied picture of international counterterrorism efforts to date, with clear progress in some areas and deterioration in others. The reports also illustrate how the rapidly evolving terrorist threat presents an ongoing
May 11, 2009
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Michael Jacobson
In-Depth Reports
Peace through Security:
America's Role in the Development of the Palestinian Authority Security Services
On May 7, 2009, Lt. Gen. Keith Dayton delivered the Michael Stein Address on U.S. Middle East Policy at The Washington Institute's 2009 Soref Symposium.
May 7, 2009
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Keith Dayton
In-Depth Reports
The Middle East Security Agenda:
An Israeli Assessment
Download the complete proceedings. In keynote remarks made at The Washington Institute's 2009 Soref Symposium, Michael Herzog discussed the Israeli perspective on growing security challenges in the Middle East, with particular focus on the Iranian threat. Michael Herzog, a brigadier general in the Israel Defense Forces, currently serves as chief
May 7, 2009
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Michael Herzog
In-Depth Reports
'Mutual Interest and Mutual Respect':
Ideas for U.S. Public Diplomacy toward the 'Muslim World'
Download the complete proceedings. James Glassman, Marc Lynch, and Robert Satloff addressed The Washington Institute's 2009 Soref Symposium to discuss challenges for U.S. public diplomacy efforts, and offer suggestions for the Obama administration as it attempts to improve America's image in the Middle East and beyond. James Glassman, president of
May 7, 2009
◆
Robert Satloff
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