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The No-State Solution



[ © The Washington Institute for near policy ]

 A recent essay touting a “one-state” approach to Israel-Palestinian issues is more about eliminating the world’s only Jewish state than offering real solutions to complex regional problems.  

Climate, Peace and Security Fact Sheet in Yemen



[ © Stockholm International Peace Research Institute ]

 This report examines the prolonged political, humanitarian and developmental challenges faced by Yemen. It offers a range of recommended actions for the international community to address these issues effectively. Yemen is grappling with a severe humanitarian crisis triggered by ongoing conflict, economic instability and climate change-related disasters. The country is experiencing escalating temperatures, rising sea levels and shifting rainfall patterns, resulting in devastating floods, droughts, water scarcity and soil degradation.  

Gender equality in the Gambia: Citizens demand greater government efforts



[ © AFRO Barometer ]

 A majority of citizens endorse gender equality in hiring, land ownership, and politics, although many consider it likely that women who run for public office will face negative reactions from their communities and families. A majority of Gambians say the government needs to do more to promote equal rights and opportunities for women.  

Somali Vernacular Humanitarianism: Translocal Emergency Assistance



[ © Danish Institute for International Studies ]

 Drought, floods and conflict are recurrent phenomena in the Somali regions, as are local emergency support practices that take place outside the auspices of the international humanitarian system. Kinship and community members share and donate food, money and other kinds of support to people in need, drawing on long-established kinship practices and narratives of a snared nomadic heritage.  

Changing climate, changing realities: migration in the Sahel



[ © Overseas Development Institute ]

 This report summarizes findings from research by ODI, commissioned by the British Red Cross. It explores links between climate change and human mobility in the Sahel, with a specific focus on case studies on Mali and Sudan, highlighting experiences and perceptions from communities. Within the Sahel, migration has long been an important resilience strategy for people’s survival and a way to create new economic opportunities during times of both crisis and stability.  

Reading of the Week: Yevgeny Prigozhin and the Wagner Group. The Roots of the Phenomenon and its Effects on Russia following the June 23, 2023 Mutiny



[ © The Institute for National Security Studies ]

 Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Russian mercenaries, known as the Wagner Group, while comprising a relatively small part of the Russian forces in general, played an important role in Russia’s war against Ukraine, not only thanks to their military skills, but also due to Prigozhin’s political and media capabilities. Indeed, they have influenced the battlefield and the situation within Russia. On June 23, 2023, increasing friction between Prigozhin, who emerged during the war as an independent anti-establishment political player (he has no formal position in the establishment), and the Russian military establishment, led to an armed uprising against the militarysecurity leadership, unprecedented in modern Russian history.  

Chinas Middle Eastern Moment



[ © Carnegie Middle East Center ]

 Abdullah Baabood is a nonresident scholar at the Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center. He holds the chair of the state of Qatar for Islamic area studies and is a visiting professor at the Faculty of International Research and Education at Waseda University in Tokyo. Recently, he wrote an article for Carnegie titled, “Why China Is Emerging as a Main Promoter of Stability in the Strait of Hormuz.” Diwan interviewed Baabood in late May to discuss his article, and more broadly to get his perspective on China’s changing role in the Middle East, particularly with regard to the Gulf countries.  

Can the Saudi Iranian Raprocchement Help Adress Lebanons Governance Crisis?



[ © Brookings ]

 Lebanon is sliding into “failed state” status. The country has been limping along with a weak interim executive while the presidency has been vacant for over six months. A full restoration of the country’s leading governance institutions is needed as a first step to implement the long-awaited economic and fiscal reforms required to fulfill an International Monetary Fund bailout of $3 billion.  

Middle East WMD-Free Zone Project



[ © United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research ]

 The urgency of establishing a zone free of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in the Middle East has never been more apparent, yet its achievement remains distant. Very little progress has been made so far despite many resolutions in international forums and the broad international and regional support for its establishment. The long-standing divisions among regional states regarding the issue of a Middle East WMD-Free Zone (ME WMDFZ) have been combined with deep-seated rivalries and a lack of trust among states. These have led to a decline in attention to, interest in and research on collaborative initiatives to mitigate proliferation challenges in the Middle East and achieve progress on a ME WMDFZ. As progress remains elusive, the escalating risks associated with known and suspected WMD programmes only heighten the likelihood of further proliferation, conflict and instability within the region and beyond its borders.  

Apartheid and the Palestine Liberation Movement: Opportunities and Challenges



[ © Middle East Council on Global Affairs ]

 The characterization of Israeli control over Palestinians as an apartheid system represents a significant shift in the way the regime is portrayed and understood. While the application of the term to Israel has been around since the 1960s, traction has intensified over the past two decades, partly due to the emergence of an anti-apartheid movement and increasing recognition that Israel’s grip on Palestinian territory is permanent. Legal experts, scholars, human rights professionals, and multilateral institutions have all contributed to the growing body of research and analysis supporting the charge.  

How Rising Debt Has Increased Egypts and Tunisias Geopolitical Peripheralization



[ © Carnegie Middle East Center ]

 High levels of debt and changing bailout strategies are reshaping the geopolitical landscape of the Middle East and North Africa. Countries exporting hydrocarbons are gaining prominence over the highly indebted nations of Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, and Tunisia. This is exacerbating the economic marginalization of low- and middle-income countries, forcing them to align geopolitically with ambitious, resource-rich funders, whose overlapping or colliding spheres of influence are fragmenting the region.  

From Burden Sharing to Responsibility Sharing



[ © Center for Strategic & International Studies ]

 In recent years, initiatives to improve NATO burden sharing that is, the extent to which allies are sufficiently contributing to the common defense have resulted in marginal defense spending increases. Yet publics and parliaments remain concerned that most allies are not spending 2 percent of their gross domestic products on defense.