the NATO Southern HUB
  • Topics
  • Regions
  • In the news
  • Our Network
  • About us

Home  /  In the news  /  Weekly reading

  Weekly readings










































































































































































































Striking Back: Iran and the Rise of Asymmetric Drone Warfare in the Middle East



[ © The Washington Institute ]

 Iranian drone strikes, as exemplified by the September 2019 attack against Saudi Aramco facilities, have jolted Middle East leaders and revealed Tehran’s long-range precision strike capabilities. The regime’s large and growing drone force, which can be used for reconnaissance or strike missions, now poses an existential threat to the Gulf states and a direct threat to Israel, as does its formidable missile force.  

After Oil-For-Security: A Blueprint for Resetting US-Saudi Security Relations



[ © Middle East Institute ]

 Although U.S.-Saudi bilateral ties are on the mend, ambiguities and the transactional nature of the 1945 oil-for-security covenant contribute to mistrust and mutual tensions. But the burden of fixing or stabilizing the relationship is a shared responsibility. For its part, Saudi Arabia should make a determined and demonstrable effort to address legitimate U.S. concerns, including human rights, oil production policy, security overtures to Beijing, and the war in Yemen.  

The Chips Alliance: How will the Global Technology War Affect Israel?



[ © The Institute for National Security Studies ]

 The growing competition between the West and China over the chips manufacturing market is perceived as “the Cold War of the 21st century.” How does this technology struggle between the global blocs affect Israel, and what measures should Israel take?  

Liberia Country Food and Agriculture Delivery Compact



[ © African Development Bank Group ]

 Liberia exhibits a high reliance on imports of staple foods which is worsened by vulnerability to market shocks, supply chain disruptions and global food-price volatility, especially due to the ongoing Russia-Ukraine crisis. The Liberia Food and Agriculture Delivery Compact outlines a plan increase local productivity in four priority value chains-rice, rubber, cassava and livestock - in order to reduce reliance on imports and provide an essential platform for interministerial coordination in agriculture.  

The Price of Life: Revolutionary Agency and Political Impasse in Post-Bashir Sudan



[ © Rift Valley Institute ]

 In Sudan, the revolutionary upsurge of 2018/2019 signaled the implosion of the country’s postcolonial political order. The political parties of old have seen their social bases wither away and their ideological hold over the Sudanese people corrode under the sustained pressure of a hyper-extractive political economy.  

Reading of the Week: Wagner Group



[ © Center for Security Studies ETH Zurich ]

 This edition focuses on the Wagner Group private military company. Firstly, Andreas Heinemann-​Grüder summarizes the development of Wagner since 2014/15, highlighting that it operates in coordination with Russian security agencies as a parallel or shadow army that can rarely be held accountable. Secondly, Stephen Aris considers how Wagner’s prominent, if not officially acknowledged, role in the offensive on Ukraine has accelerated a process of semi-​privatizing certain functions of state security.  

Whither the China Policy of the Sixth Netanyahu Government?



[ © Institute for National Security Studies ]

 As the 37th Israeli government begins its term of office, it faces a host of national security challenges, from the Temple Mount, to the Palestinian theater, the security challenges in the north, and the complex threat from Iran, most of which have a significant international dimension. Against the background of the strategic competition between the great powers, the war in Ukraine, and the struggle for technological-economic dominance, the new government must navigate prudently between the United States, Israel’s great strategic ally; and China, its significant economic partner, Russia, its military neighbor in the north; and other important countries in Asia and Europe.  

China, Africa and the market for donkeys: Keeping the cart behind the donkey



[ © The South African Institute for International Affairs ]

 ‘If, as Herodotus stated, Egypt is the gift of the Nile, then it is a gift largely delivered by donkeys.’ Some 7 000 years ago in East Africa, Nubian and Somalian donkeys and their new pastoralist owners planted the seeds of early global trade and travel. The donkey (Equus asinus) was gradually adopted as a domesticated species beyond Eastern Africa, in Egypt and Sudan, and across the African continent and Eurasia.  

Resolution 9253 The situation concerning Iraq



[ © UN Security Council ]

 This was a meeting on Iraq. Special Representative and head of UNAMI Ms. Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert briefed on recent developments in Iraq and the Secretary-General’s reports on UNAMI (S/2023/58) and the issue of missing Kuwaiti and third-party nationals and missing Kuwaiti property (S/2023/51).  

The Incarceration of security prisoners - What is possible, and what is correct



[ © The Institute for National Security Studies ]

 “End the summer camp” was how Minister of National Security Ben-Gvir related to the changes he plans in the conditions of the security prisoners incarcerated in Israel. There is no question that reforms here are in order. However, given that the issue of prisoners is a highly sensitive issue and enjoys a consensus throughout Palestinian society, it is quite possible that a worsening of the prisoners’ conditions might lead to escalation, perhaps even to a severe degree. How should Israel act?  

Criminalization of Gender-Based Violence: A Legal Obligation



[ © Wilson Center ]

 In the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, violence against women (VAW) is referred to as a silent cancer that often goes undetected and unreported. Society in this region is becoming more aware of the epidemic, yet it is still not gender-sensitive to its causes or implications.  

African Social Media Indicates Indifference towards Russia



[ © The South African Institute for International Affairs ]

 Although positivity around Russia-Africa relations was observed, most notably in South Africa and Mali, the surveyed populations presented as generally indifferent to or negative towards Russia. The Russia-Ukraine war was a key driver of anti-Russia attitudes. Additionally, the data found a division in sentiment between some African governments and their citizens, who tend to be more wary of associating with Moscow and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Data suggested measurable bot activity present in pro-Russia sentiment across all surveyed countries. Given the latest developments such as the referendums in eastern Ukraine and the Nord Stream pipelines leak, additional analyses on data collected from Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa found evidence of continued strong anti-Russian sentiment — even where Twitter users speculated about Western interference.