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Articles & Testimony
A Policy for Promoting Liberal Democracy in Egypt
Hala Mustafa is editor-in-chief of the Egyptian political quarterly al-Dimuqratiya (Democracy) and Keston Visiting Fellow at The Washington Institute. The following is an excerpt from the conclusion of her article. Download the complete text of the paper in PDF format. The United States Must Revise Its Approach to Democracy Promotion
May 1, 2006
Articles & Testimony
A New Strategy on Iran
The United States and Iran are playing programmed roles in a minuet on nuclear weapons. The United States pushes the U.N. Security Council to warn Iran about the consequences of going nuclear. And Iran continues its march toward development of nuclear power, even as its president declares that "we don't
May 1, 2006
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Dennis Ross
In-Depth Reports
Troubled Waters:
Future U.S. Security Assistance in the Persian Gulf
"Gulf stability is not just a regional issue; it is a global one. This book is a critical reference for understanding the security challenges in an area containing the bulk of the world's energy reserves." --Anthony Cordesman, former director of intelligence assessment, Office of the Secretary of Defense Whatever the
May 1, 2006
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Michael Knights
Articles & Testimony
Assessing Iraq's Sunni Arab Insurgency
This article was featured by the U.S. Army Professional Writing Collection. Three years after the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the fall of Saddam Hussein, confusion and controversy still surround the insurgency in Iraq’s Sunni Triangle. Part of this is due to the nontraditional character of the Sunni Arab insurgency
May 1, 2006
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Michael Eisenstadt
Jeffrey White
Articles & Testimony
Iran's Defiance:
The West Has More Options than Just the Extremes, Attack or Appease
Given the fiasco over Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, it is only natural that many people are suspicious about the crisis atmosphere around Iran's nuclear program. But the worries about what Iran is doing are based on U.N. inspections of what Iran proudly shows off to the world. Iran's "nuclear
Apr 30, 2006
Brief Analysis
Bad Riddance:
The Dangers of Deportation as a Counterterror Policy
Sami al-Arian's plea agreement, unsealed last week in Tampa, Florida, has been almost universally billed as a domestic counterterrorism victory. Al-Arian pleaded guilty to providing financial and material support to Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a U.S. specially designated terrorist group, and agreed to be deported. He is one of a small
Apr 28, 2006
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Emily Hunt
Brief Analysis
Chinese-Saudi Cooperation:
Oil but also Missiles
On April 22, two days after a reportedly unproductive meeting with President George W. Bush in Washington, President Hu Jintao of China will arrive in Saudi Arabia. Relations between the two countries are an increasingly important part of world diplomacy. In energy, China is the leading customer of Saudi Arabia
Apr 21, 2006
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Simon Henderson
Brief Analysis
Iraq:
A Report from the Front
On April 13, 2006, Lt. Gen. John Vines addressed The Washington Institute's Special Policy Forum. General Vines served until January 2006 as commander of the Multinational Corps-Iraq (MNC-I). The following is a rapporteur's summary of his remarks. Threat Assessment At the commencement of military operations in Iraq in 2003, the
Apr 19, 2006
Articles & Testimony
Abort Hamas
The new government to be formed in Israel has one urgent task: to abort the government of Hamas. Not to rout it or overthrow it, but to act with determination to cause its paralysis; to make it obvious to every Palestinian, within a few months' time, that Ismail Haniyah and
Apr 17, 2006
Brief Analysis
Preventing Turkey's Popular Slide away from the West
Iran's nuclear program presents one more issue on which Washington sees Middle East developments in a different light than does the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government in Turkey. Since coming to power in November 2002, AKP leaders have pursued rapprochement with Damascus and enhanced dialogue with Iran. In March
Apr 12, 2006
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Soner Cagaptay
Brief Analysis
How Much Do the EU and Russia Care about Iran?
On April 3, 2006, Walter Posch, Vladimir Esveev, and Patrick Clawson addressed The Washington Institute's Special Policy Forum. Walter Posch is a research fellow at the European Union's Institute for Security Studies in Paris. Vladimir Esveev is a senior associate at the Center for International Security at the Institute for
Apr 11, 2006
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Patrick Clawson
In-Depth Reports
The Point of No Return:
Iran's Path to Democracy
Since the 1979 Islamic revolution, Iranian society has been transformed. Urbanism, literacy, industrial growth, international contact, and involvement by women in social and economic affairs have all increased, pushing the country toward democracy. Intellectual life is no longer dominated by revolutionary ideas, but rather by a new paradigm of liberalism
Apr 6, 2006
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Mohsen Sazegara
Articles & Testimony
Moscow's New Twist
President Vladimir Putin's Russia has made its choice, and it is not one that gives Israel, the United States or Western Europe any cause for joy. The Kremlin has apparently adopted a strategy of engagement with the forces of Islam, and is staking out a new position between the Muslim
Apr 3, 2006
Articles & Testimony
Hobbling Hamas:
Moving beyond the U.S. Policy of Three No's
Last week, one of the world's deadliest terrorist organizations--the Islamic Resistance Movement, aka Hamas--announced that it has formed a cabinet and is now poised to take effective control of the Palestinian Authority, which governs Gaza and the Palestinian population of the West Bank. This comes two months after the group
Apr 3, 2006
Articles & Testimony
Israel's Unlikely Transformer
Read Ehud Olmert's remarks at The Washington Institute's 2003 Weinberg Founders Conference. I sat alone with Ehud Olmert. It was Sept. 20, 2003, and he was despondent over the progress of peace talks with the Palestinians. Just two weeks earlier, the main hope for moderation on the Palestinian side, Mahmoud
Apr 2, 2006
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David Makovsky
Articles & Testimony
The IDF and the Israeli Spirit
Adapted from the Zalman C. Bernstein Memorial Lecture in Jewish Political Thought, hosted by the Shalem Center and delivered by the author in Jerusalem on January 19, 2006. I know of no other country in the world whose existence as an independent, sovereign state has been called into question for
Apr 1, 2006
In-Depth Reports
Hamas: Politics, Charity, and Terrorism in the Service of Jihad
Matthew Levitt exposes the real Hamas: an organization that threatens peace and security far beyond the borders of the West Bank and Gaza.
Apr 1, 2006
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Matthew Levitt
Elections in Israel
On March 28, 2006, David Makovsky and Ziad Asali joined Dennis Ross on PBS’s Charlie Rose Show to discuss Israel’s parliamentary elections. Mr. Ross is counselor and Ziegler distinguished fellow at The Washington Institute. Mr. Makovsky is director of the Project on the Middle East Peace Process at the Institute
Mar 28, 2006
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Dennis Ross
David Makovsky
Brief Analysis
High Rises and Low Wages:
Expatriate Labor in Gulf Arab States
On March 21 and 22 as many as three thousand foreign construction workers rioted in the Persian Gulf emirate of Dubai in protest at conditions on the site where the world's tallest building is being built. Cars and construction machinery were wrecked and office windows broken as the workers demanded
Mar 27, 2006
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Simon Henderson
Brief Analysis
Quelling Iraq's Sectarian Violence:
What the United States Can Do
The ongoing debate over whether or not Iraq is on the verge or in the midst of a civil war is a distraction from the main challenge the United States now faces in Iraq: how to reduce or contain sectarian (and ethnic) violence that could derail the political process and
Mar 27, 2006
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Michael Eisenstadt
Pagination
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