Rami Khouri is a Beirut-based internationally syndicated columnist, Director of the Islam Fares Institute of Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut, and editor-at-large of The Daily Star newspaper. He also regularly shares his insights on the BBC, NPR, and CNN. Khouri sheds light on the forces shaping the direction and impact of United States policy in the Middle East. Where is the failing? Are there effective policies and programs that should be expanded? And what are the challenges that lay ahead?https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-av/1073/thumbnail.jp
This is an analysis of the perspectives of Detroit area Arab Americans and Chaldeans on major foreig...
Outlines considerations for funders with respect to the development of human capital and strengtheni...
In recent years, the rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran has become increasingly influential in sh...
How should the United States proceed in the Middle East beyond the borders of Iraq? Middle East expe...
In this June 19, 2003 episode of Global Journalist, host Byron Scott and four journalists from Iraq,...
In what follows, I will discuss the transformation of Iran’s Persian Gulf policy since 1979, its rol...
Large parts of the Middle East today are engulfed in violence. Why? What historical factors shape th...
DOHA, Qatar—When Americans look at events in the Middle East, they do not have a clear and simple re...
In the last decade, the Middle East has emerged as the predominant region of conflict within the mod...
The mission of the Middle East Institute is to promote knowledge of the Middle East in Amer-ica and ...
The rise of the so-called Islamic State (IS) in vast swathes of territories in Syria and Iraq, and t...
Rising education, easier travel, new communications media, and liberalizing voices are quickly makin...
In what follows, I will discuss the transformation of Iran’s Persian Gulf policy since 1979, its rol...
In the avalanche of analyses about what went wrong in Iraq, one area should be of particular interes...
Background: In the early 1950s, a former US diplomat in Beirut, Thomas McFadden (1953), surveyed jou...
This is an analysis of the perspectives of Detroit area Arab Americans and Chaldeans on major foreig...
Outlines considerations for funders with respect to the development of human capital and strengtheni...
In recent years, the rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran has become increasingly influential in sh...
How should the United States proceed in the Middle East beyond the borders of Iraq? Middle East expe...
In this June 19, 2003 episode of Global Journalist, host Byron Scott and four journalists from Iraq,...
In what follows, I will discuss the transformation of Iran’s Persian Gulf policy since 1979, its rol...
Large parts of the Middle East today are engulfed in violence. Why? What historical factors shape th...
DOHA, Qatar—When Americans look at events in the Middle East, they do not have a clear and simple re...
In the last decade, the Middle East has emerged as the predominant region of conflict within the mod...
The mission of the Middle East Institute is to promote knowledge of the Middle East in Amer-ica and ...
The rise of the so-called Islamic State (IS) in vast swathes of territories in Syria and Iraq, and t...
Rising education, easier travel, new communications media, and liberalizing voices are quickly makin...
In what follows, I will discuss the transformation of Iran’s Persian Gulf policy since 1979, its rol...
In the avalanche of analyses about what went wrong in Iraq, one area should be of particular interes...
Background: In the early 1950s, a former US diplomat in Beirut, Thomas McFadden (1953), surveyed jou...
This is an analysis of the perspectives of Detroit area Arab Americans and Chaldeans on major foreig...
Outlines considerations for funders with respect to the development of human capital and strengtheni...
In recent years, the rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran has become increasingly influential in sh...