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51. Iraqi Officials Eye a Path for Chinese-Iraqi Development

52. How to Stop Iraqi Kurdistan’s “Bleeding”

53. Syrians' Reactions to the First Weeks of Israel-Hamas War

54. Morocco and North Africa Are Feeling Anti-Normalization Ripples from the Gaza War

55. After Gaza, Recalibrated Prospects for a Geopolitical Europe

56. Three Presidents, Three Flawed Iran Policies, and the Path Ahead

57. No Going Back: Activists Reflect a Decade After the Arab Spring

58. Hezbollahland: Mapping Dahiya and Lebanon's Shia Community

59. Hezbollah in Colombia: Past and Present Modus Operandi and the Need for Greater Scrutiny

60. Beyond the Blocs: Jewish Settlement East of Israel's Security Barrier and How to Avert the Slide to a One-State Outcome

61. Countering Iran's Regional Strategy: A Long-Term, Comprehensive Approach

62. The Age of Political Jihadism: A Study of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham

63. The U.S.-Egypt Military Relationship: Complexities, Contradictions, and Challenges

64. Turkish Influence in Sub-Saharan Africa

65. The Necessary U.S. Role in Fixing the Baghdad-Kurdistan Energy Dispute

66. The Revolution Will Be Televised in Arabic: Iran's Media Infrastructure Abroad

67. U.S. Counterterrorism Reimagined: Tracking the Biden Administration's Effort to Reform How America Addresses Violent Extremism

68. China's Security Presence in the Middle East: Redlines and Guidelines for the United States

69. Fighting Jihadists By, With, and Through U.S. Partners: Lessons Learned and Future Prospects

70. Beyond Elections: Evolving Arab Public Opinion on Democracy and Human Rights

71. Iran's Nuclear Hedging Strategy: Shaping the Islamic Republic's Proliferation Calculus

72. Reexamining U.S. Aid to the Middle East: Ideas for Advancing Both Governance and Democracy

73. Rhetoric Meets Reality in Jawlani’s Push for Self-Sufficiency

74. The Israeli Government Falls: New Election and Implications for U.S.-Israel Relations

75. Biden Sees Oil as Key to His Visit, but Does Riyadh Agree?

76. How to Respond to China’s Growing Influence in the Gulf

77. Arab Syrian IDPs of Tal Rifaat also Want to Go Home

78. Looking for Legitimacy: Taliban Diplomacy Since the Fall of Kabul

79. Iraq’s Constitutional Moment?

80. How Iran’s Protests Differ from Past Movements

81. Scoring Iraq’s New Government: Metrics for Preserving U.S. Interests

82. Snapback Sanctions on Iran: More Bark Than Bite?

83. Changing Population Patterns Will Reshape the Middle East

84. The Tenacity of Young Iranians in the Protest Movement

85. Hamas at 35

86. A Stabilizing Factor: Oman’s Quiet Influence amid Mounting Uncertainty in the Gulf

87. Soldiers of End-Times: Assessing the Military Effectiveness of the Islamic State

88. Beyond Forever Wars and Great Power Competition: Rethinking the U.S. Military Role in the Middle East

89. A Sultan in Autumn: Erdogan Faces Turkey's Uncontainable Forces

90. Promoting Sovereignty and Accountability in Iraq: Guidelines for the Biden Administration

91. Accidental Allies: The US–Syrian Democratic Forces Partnership Against the Islamic State

92. Triangular Diplomacy: Unpacking Russia's Syria Strategy

93. Deals, Drones, and National Will: The New Era in Turkish Power Projection

94. A Strategy to Contain Hezbollah: Ideas and Recommendations

95. A New Start for the U.S. on Mideast Democracy and Human Rights

96. Washington and the Next Arab Spring

97. A Vanishing West in the Middle East: The Recent History of U.S.-Europe Cooperation in the Region

98. Back to Basics: U.S.-Iraq Security Cooperation in the Post-Combat Era

99. A Blurred Line Between Civil Society and Terrorism: Examining Charges of NGOs Funding the PFLP

100. Iranian Perceptions of the U.S. Soft Power Threat