Middle East Research and Information Project

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Critical Coverage of the Middle East Since 1971

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Current Analysis

The "Olive Branch" That Ought to Cross the Wall

The autumn olive harvest used to be a time of celebration in this West Bank village. Entire families would spend days together in the groves. Even Israelis would make special trips here at this time of year to buy our olive oil. But with new Israeli restrictions on access to the fields, Palestinian
Abdul-Latif Khaled • 3 min read
Current Analysis

Iran's Human Rights Record Should Be As 'Intolerable' As Its Nukes

The Islamic Republic of Iran is in hot water with Washington and European capitals because of its apparent pursuit of a nuclear bomb. Dangling carrots of increased trade, the Europeans are trying to persuade Iran to renounce atomic ambitions. Skeptical of these methods but bogged down in Iraq, the B
Kaveh Ehsani • 2 min read
Current Analysis

The IMF and the Future of Iraq

On November 21, 2004, the 19 industrialized nations that make up the so-called Paris Club issued a decision that, in effect, traces the outline of Iraq's economic future. The decision concerns a portion of Iraq's $120 billion sovereign debt—a staggering amount that all concerned parties recognize is
Zaid Al-Ali • 12 min read
Current Analysis

Hypocrisy Doesn't Win Arab Friends

A prominent liberal Arab journalist who strongly supported the war in Iraq, has a long record of outspoken opposition to Islamic extremism, and has a deep appreciation for American values recently told me that he has never been more depressed or more alienated from the United States. Why? He was abs
Marc Lynch • 3 min read
Current Analysis

The Politics of Slaughter in Sudan

One day in the summer of 2004, more than 400 armed members of the janjaweed militia attacked the western Sudanese village of Donki Dereisa. They killed 150 civilians, including six young children, aged 3 to 14, who were captured during the assault and burned alive later that day, according to
Dan Connell • 11 min read
Current Analysis

Gaza's Wars of Perception

Operation Days of Penitence, launched on September 29, 2004, is the Israeli military's most extensive incursion into the Gaza Strip since the beginning of the current Palestinian uprising and its largest offensive within the Occupied Territories since the 2002 reconquest of West Bank cities during Operation Defensive Shield.
Mouin Rabbani • 8 min read
Current Analysis

Afghanistan's Presidential Elections

Less than a month before George W. Bush's second bid for the White House, his protégé and partner in post-Taliban Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai, faces an election that both men hope will not only establish the legitimacy of Karzai's presidency but also prove the Bush administration's claim that the war-
M. Nazif Shahrani • 9 min read
Current Analysis

Fahrenheit 9/11 Plays Cairo

The cinema was crowded but not full when, at the end of August, Michael Moore’s documentary Fahrenheit 9/11 opened in a theater in Cairo's leafy southern suburb of Maadi. An audience made up of expatriate employees of UN agencies and well-heeled Egyptians snickered at each of
Garay Menicucci • 6 min read
Current Analysis

Off the Grid

Air-conditioned transportation in Tehran is notoriously difficult to find. For pampered visitors such as the cultural anthropologists and documentary filmmakers from New York and Los Angeles who seem to converge on the Iranian capital every summer, a cool taxi ride to the northern parts of town reca
Negar Mottahedeh • 18 min read
Current Analysis

Hizballah and Syria's "Lebanese Card"

The clock is ticking on a surprising UN Security Council resolution, passed on September 2, calling on Syria to cease its various forms of interference in Lebanon. France and the United States co-sponsored the call on "all remaining foreign forces to withdraw from Lebanon," which charged the UN
Nicholas Blanford • 11 min read
Current Analysis

Kuwait's Parliament Considers Women's Political Rights, Again

When Kuwait's parliament reconvenes in late October, it will be facing a full agenda. Member initiatives include an ambitious redistricting bill and threats to interpellate at least two cabinet ministers. The government's wish list is equally contentious; it includes a wide-ranging privatization pro
Mary Ann Tétreault • 10 min read
Current Analysis

Darfur: Worst Humanitarian Crisis

“The worst humanitarian crisis in the world today”—so relief agencies and news reports refer to the catastrophe still unfolding in the westernmost Sudanese province of Darfur. With the United Nations estimating that 50,000 people have been killed and 1 million displaced, the description is apt. But
Maren Milligan • 2 min read

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