Slide 3

Ramadan and Al-Aqsa: Toward a New “Status Quo” Taking Shape Through Gradual Accumulation

Ramadan is approaching amid escalating challenges imposed by the Israeli police inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound. Police and administrative measures are intensifying in ways that are no longer read as temporary security steps, but rather as accumulated tools producing a new status quo. In this context, the slogan “custodianship does not mean sovereignty” is not advanced merely as a legal…

Read More »

The European Perspective on the Future Role of the United States

▪️ The rise of European skepticism regarding the viability of the strategic partnership with Washington and the renewed prominence of the concept of European “strategic autonomy.”▪️ The erosion of trust within NATO as a result of increasing American unilateralism and the reordering of security priorities.▪️ Accumulated trade disputes between the two sides, exacerbated by tariffs and reciprocal threats.▪️ A widening…

Read More »

Ankara at a Critical Juncture: How Is It Viewed from Jordan?

The security architecture of the Middle East has, for several years, been undergoing profound and overlapping transformations that have reshaped the contours of the regional environment. The expansion of fragile states, the continuation of Israeli military operations and their repercussions for regional stability, coupled with the decline of U.S. engagement and the erosion of the effectiveness of the “security umbrella”…

Read More »

Muscat Round: The Thin Thread of Hope Between Washington and Tehran

Muscat, the capital of Oman, hosted last Friday a new round of “indirect” U.S.–Iran negotiations—an attempt to identify common ground that might pave the way for an agreement capable of defusing a potential war. Such a confrontation could erupt if the United States were to launch a military strike against Iran, a move that would likely compel Tehran to respond…

Read More »

An Expert on Iranian Affairs: Any Change in Iran Will Come “From Within,” with the Blessing of the Revolutionary Guard and the Religious Establishment

The Nature of Protests and Internal Transformations in Iran Despite their recurrence since 2009, protests in Iran cannot be read as a movement aimed at overthrowing the regime, but rather as a broad reformist pressure mechanism seeking to redistribute power and wealth and to achieve greater developmental justice. Although calls for “regime change” have appeared at specific historical moments, they…

Read More »

Pezeshkian’s Dilemma: Structural Constraints on Belated Reform and the Limits of Internal Transition in Iran

Masoud Pezeshkian’s experience embodies a living manifestation of the reformist’s predicament when he is summoned after the moment has passed—not as a project of structural transformation, but as an instrument for managing deadlock and reducing the costs of systemic collapse. The legacy of Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri represents a latent horizon of internal transition, one that may still allow for…

Read More »

From Lobby to Hegemony

The American researcher and one of the most prominent scholars in international relations and U.S. foreign policy, Jeffrey Sachs, does not hesitate, in his commentary on the American campaign against Iran, to state that Israel today fully leads America in the Middle East. This is something many now regard as one of the core assumptions in analyzing U.S. foreign policy.…

Read More »

Jordanian youth conclude “A New Horizon” with a direct dialogue with decision-makers and a shared discourse on political modernization

On Wednesday, Jordanian young men and women concluded the activities of the project “A New Horizon: Unifying Youth and Women’s Discourse to Support Modernization in Jordan”, implemented by the Politics and Society Institute (PSI) in partnership with the Naya Community Network, and supported by the United Nations Democracy Fund (UNDEF). The project concluded with a large-scale closing ceremony, attended by…

Read More »

Haredim and the State in Israel: The Limits of Citizenship and the Burden-Sharing Conflict in a Shifting Religious–Civilian Hybrid State

In recent months, debate inside Israel has intensified over the future of exemptions granted to the Haredi community, amid demographic and sociological transformations that render the old arrangement increasingly untenable. This debate is not confined to the question of conscription or the distribution of economic burdens; rather, it reflects a deeper crisis in the structure of Israel’s social contract, which…

Read More »

Jordanian Youth Conclude “New Horizon” with Direct Dialogue with Decision-Makers and a Unified Discourse for Political Modernization

Jordanian young men and women concluded, on Wednesday, the activities of the project “New Horizon: Unifying Youth and Women’s Discourse to Support Modernization in Jordan,” implemented by the Politics and Society Institute (PSI) in partnership with NAYA Community Network and supported by the United Nations Democracy Fund (UNDEF), through a large closing ceremony attended by prominent local and international officials,…

Read More »
Back to top button