Unrest, uncertainty continues in Morocco
July 6, 2017 4 min. read

Morocco has long been viewed as a center of stability, with development potential and openness to reform. It has also been a beacon for foreign investment for these regions, considered in many respects an oasis surrounded by a volatile region. Yet in the last month, unusually fervent protests have shaken things, exposed vast inequality and […]

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Arab Spring Sequel? Unrest Grows in Morocco
June 5, 2017 4 min. read

Morocco is not known for political activism or protests. Yet in the last 2 weeks the country has seen the largest popular protests and government backlash since the 2011 Arab Spring.

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Libyan Oil: A Bittersweet Return?
December 24, 2016 4 min. read

Libyan oil coming back online could jeopardize a fragile production cut deal orchestrated by producers cartel OPEC to rebalance the global oil supply glut.

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Muslim Democrats? Tunisia’s Delicate Experiment
September 30, 2016 5 min. read

In May 2016, Ennahda—an Islamist party—did something fairly shocking: it disassociated itself from Islam, or, more specifically, from political Islam.

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Arab Spring Aftermath: Libya
September 25, 2016 4 min. read

The fall of Gaddafi destroyed the fragile post-colonial state which his iron-fisted rule had held together.

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Algeria: Bunkering Down in a Bad Neighborhood
May 2, 2016 5 min. read

From the outside, Algeria seems relatively stable, especially in contrast to Libya and Egypt. Behind the scenes, however, a succession crisis is underway

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South Sudan in Crisis
January 1, 2014 4 min. read

[European Union] South Sudan earned its independence just over two years ago. Yesterday, really. By the standards of international policy most countries had not even begun to think about South Sudan as anything other than a regional roadblock, never mind as its own entity. Hell, I don’t even have a coherent view of South Sudan. […]

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Where the ‘Ikhwan’ goes, so shall Egypt
December 31, 2013 9 min. read

There are many—both in the East and the West—who have been confidently betting on the overt plan to marginalize, and, in due course, eradicate the Muslim Brotherhood (Ikhwan) as a sociopolitical movement. In light of the on-going vicious Ikhwanophobia and emboldened brutality of the coup regime, it is hard to counter such contemptuous optimism. But, […]

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Where’s a leader when you need one? In Morocco.
November 13, 2013 2 min. read

Check out this very insightful piece from Ahmed Charai on Huffington Post, “A Regal Response to an Undue Provocation.” Ahmed makes a very good point that what makes Morocco stand out in a region of instability is King Mohammed VI’s visionary leadership. (It goes to show what I have always believed that good leadership, an open […]

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Egypt’s Revolution has the potential to surpass Syrian violence
July 12, 2013 5 min. read

To coup or not to coup? Who cares? Whatever label it is being given, coup or revolution, what the Egyptian military accomplished less than one week ago is removing a government supposedly democratically elected. This comes on the heels of a previous removal of a long-standing dictator — Hosni Mubarak —  just over two years […]

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Egypt after the Coup
July 11, 2013 7 min. read

Recent events in Egypt have been tumultuous, to say the least. The country’s first elected president in history was deposed by the military three days after his first anniversary in office. The International Crisis Group’s description of current Egyptian politics gives the impression of a grand competition in short-sightedness. What happens next will depend on […]

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Lights, Camera, Distraction – Polisario U.N. Theatrics Prolong Humanitarian Drama
April 22, 2013 4 min. read

The U.N. Security Council is currently debating a draft resolution on whether or not to extend the peacekeeping mission in the Western Sahara (MINURSO) ahead of the April 30, 2013 deadline. For more than 20 years, the U.N. Security Council has debated, then renewed the mandate of this U.N. body rather perfunctorily—needlessly prolonging a nearly […]

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