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Israels Future in Multinational Coalitions



[ © The Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies ]

 Washington will likely call upon Israel to participate in future multinational coalitions, which will entail IDF forces deploying to foreign countries as part of US-led operations. Israel has not participated in past coalitions due to regional threats and Washington’s desire to avoid complications with allied majority Muslim states. These two concerns were significantly diminished by the Abraham Accords, increasing the likelihood that Washington will seek Israel’s direct support in future campaigns.  

Building resilience to organised crime



[ © ECOWAS ]

 State-centric approaches to building resilience to organised crime must be complemented with community-based, context-specific responses that challenge organised crime and violence at a local level. Local communities are key elements of the necessary response to the destabilising impacts of organised crime in conflict as well as post-conflict settings. There remains a gap in stakeholder understanding of the elements of community resilience to organised crime, particularly in unstable settings. This report starts to address this gap, by analysing key drivers of community resilience – identified as social capital, community capacity, the role of women, economic capital and infrastructure – in four communities in Nigeria, Guinea-Bissau and Burkina Faso.  

Defying Peripherality. How Morocco Has Sought to Integrate Its Eastern Borderlands



[ © Carnegie Middle East Center ]

 Morocco has successfully begun to connect its once-neglected eastern region to domestic and global economic resources. But it is vital to ensure that the benefits these initiatives bring are fairly reinvested in local communities.  

Reading of the week: DeepFakes and international conflict



[ © Brookings ]

 Deceit and media manipulation have always been a part of wartime communications, but never before has it been possible for nearly any actor in a conflict to generate realistic audio, video, and text of their opponent’s political officials and military leaders. As artificial intelligence (AI) grows more sophisticated and the cost of computing continues to drop, the challenge deepfakes pose to online information environments during armed conflict will only grow.  

The Geopolitics of Seawater Desalination



[ © Policy Center ]

 Water desalination is gradually emerging as the leading solution to cope with increasing water stress: i.e., the imbalance between water demand and quantities available. The United Nations estimates that by 2025, two-thirds of the world’s population will be affected by such challenges. The causes of water scarcity are multiple, including climate change, intensive agriculture, and population growth. This requires states to rethink their water policies, which are central to preserving their stability, resilience and sovereignty.  

Liberal interventions renewed crisis: Respponding to Russias growing influence in Africa



[ © Chatham House ]

 Liberal intervention actors often understand Russian engagements in Africa through a great power vacuum logic. This logic sees Russian influence as resulting from Russia filling a vacuum where other (notably liberal) interveners downscale. This article unpacks that vacuum logic and explores its consequences and effects. On the one hand, the vacuum logic is central to representations of Russia as an entirely external ‘other’, which contribute to constituting a ‘liberal’ intervention approach and community.  

Narcos, Syria-Lebanon Style



[ © The Institute for National Security Studies ]

 Drug smuggling has become a central source of income for the Assad regime and its ally Hezbollah. Under the auspices of the Syrian regime and the Shiite organization, massive amounts of drugs are smuggled throughout the Middle East, primarily Captagon, known as “poor man’s cocaine.” Why does Israel have to be mindful of this phenomenon and even join the regional struggle against it?  

Beyond Riyadh: Houthi Cross-Border Aerial Warfare 2015-2022



[ © Armed Conflict Location & Event Data ]

 On 25 March 2022, the Houthis launched a large-scale attack on Saudi Arabia using a combination of loitering munitions, ballistic missiles, and cruise missiles. This coordinated attack targeted oil refineries and energy infrastructure across Saudi territory, from Asir to the Eastern Province, and even threatened the Formula 1 Grand Prix in Jeddah. Yet, it turned out to be the last major gasp of the aerial war between Riyadh and the Sanaa-based government that had started in 2015.  

No War Yet No Peace: Why a Million Iraqis Remain Exiled in Their Own Country



[ © Brussels International Center ]

 Five years after the end of the war against the Islamic State group, more than a million people remain displaced across Iraq. Tribal feuds, destruction of infrastructures and private homes, and a lack of services and livelihood opportunities are some of the main factors impeding the safe and voluntary return of these civilians to their area of origin.  

The Islamic State Sahel Province



[ © Armed Conflict Location & Event Data ]

 The Islamic State Sahel Province (IS Sahel) is a salafi-jihadist militant group and the Sahelian affiliate of the transnational Islamic State (IS) organization. It is primarily active in the border areas between Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger - known as the tri-state border area, or Liptako-Gourma – but it has also engaged in sporadic activity in Algeria, Benin, and Nigeria. The group’s composition reflects the social fabric in the areas where it is active.  

Civil Society in Tunisia: Resetting Expectations



[ © The Washington Institute for Near East Policy ]

 Since Tunisia’s President Kais Saied began consolidating his rule in July 2021, the country’s once-strong civil society has been plagued with divisions. The former strength was a product of the post-Arab Spring period, when Tunisia emerged as a paragon for democratic transition and NGOs proliferated, including labor unions, human rights groups, and school charities. These civil society groups drew Western support based on the hope that they would help propel the state’s transition away from authoritarian rule.  

Villes nouvelles, villes politiques: Diversification des acteurs et recentralisation du pouvoir étatique dans le cas de Diamniadio



[ © Policy Center for the New South ]

 La construction de villes nouvelles sur le continent africain est en vogue. Des pôles urbains multifonctionnels en passant par les écoquartiers, les images qui accompagnent l’annonce de ces projets promeuvent un futur urbain africain basé sur la modernité et la technologie. Cette mode d’un urbanisme qui prétend faire table rase avec les approches préexistantes n’est pas propre aux pays africains, les gouvernements s’inspirent notamment des modèles nord-africains et asiatiques.