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Brief Analysis
Obama, the Arab Spring, and the Peace Process: Assessing a Pivotal Moment in U.S. Middle East Policy
On May 20, 2011, J. Scott Carpenter, Andrew J. Tabler, and Robert Satloff addressed a Policy Forum at The Washington Institute. Mr. Carpenter is the Institute's Keston Family fellow and director of Project Fikra, which focuses on empowering Arab democrats in their struggle against extremism. Mr. Tabler is the Institute's
۲۴ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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J. Scott Carpenter
Andrew J. Tabler
Robert Satloff
Articles & Testimony
A Welcome but Incomplete Shift on the Middle East
Perhaps the most striking aspect of President Obama's May 19 remarks was how greatly they differed from his 2009 Cairo speech.
۲۳ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Michael Singh
Articles & Testimony
Israel Must Set Out Its Parameters for Peace
As Hamas-PA reconciliation accelerates momentum toward an attempted statehood resolution at the UN, Israel should seize the initiative and announce its own peace parameters rather than standing still.
۲۲ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Michael Herzog
Articles & Testimony
Jinnah's Nightmare: What Went Wrong in Pakistan
When Muhammad Ali Jinnah envisioned the creation of Pakistan as a secular state for Muslims in the 1940s, he had little idea that his dream country would turn into an Islamist republic that enforces religion over its citizens, a hunting ground in which liberal Muslims are killed, and a safe haven for the world's most wanted terrorist.
۲۱ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Soner Cagaptay
Articles & Testimony
Obama Puts the Onus on Hamas, Where It Belongs -- and 1967 Borders, with Swaps, Makes Sense
President Obama surprised most observers by publicly recognizing that the primary stumbling block preventing forward movement on the peace process is not settlements, or even the status of Jerusalem or the right of return, but Hamas.
۲۰ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Matthew Levitt
Articles & Testimony
Obama to Assad: Reform or Leave
Washington and its allies should reach out to the Syrian opposition and help them plan for the eventuality of Asad's departure.
۱۹ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Andrew J. Tabler
Brief Analysis
Syria: The Case for "The Devil We Don't Know"
The Obama administration's announcement yesterday specifically sanctioning Syrian President Bashar al-Asad begins to clear the fog that has clouded policy toward this pivotal country since the outbreak of mass protests weeks ago. As U.S. and international leaders have grappled with popular uprisings across the Middle East, the tension between moral
۱۹ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Amos Yadlin
Robert Satloff
Brief Analysis
President Obama, the 'Winds of Change,' and Middle East Peace
Robert Satloff responds to Obama's recommendations regarding Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, made today in his "Winds of Change" speech at the State Department.
۱۹ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Robert Satloff
Articles & Testimony
Why a Case-by-Case Strategy Is Not Going to Work in the Middle East
When administration officials insist that each country and each revolution in the Middle East is different and must thus be handled differently, they are correct. Case-by-case action is often wise. Case-by-case strategy is not.
۱۸ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Michael Singh
Articles & Testimony
Who Will Write Turkey's New Constitution?
In anticipation of its victory in the June 12 general parliamentary elections, the AKP has promised to draft a new constitution for the country.
۱۸ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Soner Cagaptay
Brief Analysis
President Obama's Delicate Pivot: From Abbottabad to the Arab "Winds of Change"
After appropriately exulting in the daring raid against Usama bin Laden, President Obama will connect that success to a broader theme -- the Arab "winds of change" -- whose prospects for success are certainly no greater than the 50/50 odds originally given for the Abbottabad mission. In so doing, the
۱۸ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Robert Satloff
Articles & Testimony
Turkey's New Relationship with NATO: Implications for Washington
Ever since the Justice and Development Party (AKP) assumed power in Ankara in 2002, Turkey has grown gradually cold toward cooperating with the West in the Middle East. Now, the AKP is increasingly taking issue with NATO.
۱۷ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Soner Cagaptay
Articles & Testimony
What Would Netanyahu Do for Peace?
Washington cannot easily demand that Netanyahu make major concessions on peace as Abbas joins forces with a group sworn to Israel's destruction, but the Israeli prime minister should still arrive in Washington this week with a plan for renewed talks.
۱۷ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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David Makovsky
In-Depth Reports
Between Cairo and Damascus: Change, Uprising, and Revolution in Arab States
On May 13, 2011, Dalia Ziada and Amr al-Azm addressed The Washington Institute's 2011 Soref Symposium. Ms. Ziada, an Egyptian activist and blogger, is director of the American Islamic Conference's North Africa bureau. Mr. al-Azm, a Syrian historian and archaeologist, is an associate professor of Middle Eastern history and anthropology
۱۳ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Dalia Ziada
Amr al-Azm
In-Depth Reports
When the Dust Settles: The Middle East, Circa 2016
On May 13, 2011, Robin Wright, Robert Kagan, and Martin Kramer addressed The Washington Institute's 2011 Soref Symposium. Ms. Wright, a distinguished journalist who has reported from more than 140 countries, is a senior fellow at the United States Institute of Peace and a distinguished scholar at the Woodrow Wilson
۱۳ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Robin Wright
Robert Kagan
Martin Kramer
In-Depth Reports
The Arab Spring: Implications for America and the Middle East
On May 13, 2011, Hisham Kassem, Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin, and Amb. James Larocco addressed The Washington Institute's 2011 Soref Symposium. Mr. Kassem, former publisher of al-Masry al-Youm, is an independent journalist and one of Egypt's most prominent democracy activists. Maj. Gen. Yadlin is the Kay fellow at The Washington
۱۳ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Hisham Kassem
Amos Yadlin
James Larocco
Articles & Testimony
Checkbook Jihad
The raid that killed Usama bin Laden may finally shed light on the financial network behind al-Qaeda.
۱۲ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Matthew Levitt
In-Depth Reports
Michael Stein Address on U.S. Middle East Policy
On May 12, 2011, National Security Advisor Thomas E. Donilon delivered the Michael Stein Address on U.S. Middle East Policy at The Washington Institute's 2011 Soref Symposium. Mr. Donilon is national security advisor to President Obama, a post he has held since October 2010. During the Clinton administration, he served
۱۲ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Thomas Donilon
A Political Vision for Israel
An Interview by Bernard Gwertzman, CFR.org Israel marked the sixty-third anniversary of its independence yesterday against the backdrop of the Arab Spring roiling the Middle East. The democracy movement holds out promise but also challenges for Israel, says Israel expert David Makovsky, because while Israel welcomes the idea of fellow
۱۱ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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David Makovsky
In Syria, Destroying the Country to Save the Regime?
The Syrian government has stepped up its campaign to quash a seven-week uprising, reportedly using tanks to fire on cities. At least twenty people and two Syrian soldiers died in the latest clashes. Larisa Epatko of PBS NewsHour asked Andrew J. Tabler, a Next Generation fellow in The Washington Institute's
۱۱ مهٔ ۲۰۱۱
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Andrew J. Tabler
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