Program
Middle East
U.S. Security Policy

Our research on U.S. security engagement aims to highlight areas for improvement and suggest viable recommendations for how the U.S. can contribute to MENA stability while also serving U.S. national security interests.

research
From Hardware to Holism: Rebalancing America’s Security Engagement With Arab States

U.S. security policy with Arab states has long needed a major overhaul. This compendium presents different arguments and proposals for how the United States can do just this.

article
Bringing Assistance to Israel in Line With Rights and U.S. Laws

Ensuring that Israel, the largest recipient of U.S. security assistance, complies with federal laws and international human rights standards will require closely tracking and monitoring its weapons use.

· May 12, 2021
paper
Tunisia’s Wake-Up Call: How Security Challenges From Libya Are Shaping Defense Reforms

The escalation and spillover of Libya's conflict has posed mounting security challenges for Tunisia and exposed shortfalls in the country's defense transformation, in the areas of capability gaps, interagency coordination, intelligence sharing, strategic planning, and in the military's relationship with foreign security patrons.

· March 18, 2020
paper
Security Assistance in the Middle East: A Three-Dimensional Chessboard

The United States, Russia, and Iran have chosen markedly different approaches to security assistance in the Middle East, with dramatic implications for statebuilding and stability.

  • Robert Springborg
  • F.C. “Pink” Williams
  • John Zavage
· February 6, 2020
commentary
Hybridizing Security: Armies, Militias and Constrained Sovereignty

Defense sectors in several Arab countries have undergone significant transformation leading to the hybridization of security governance, leaving them with forms of sovereignty that are both constrained and constantly contested.

· October 30, 2018
Italian Institute for International Political Studies