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Opinion: Seeking legitimacy through grandiosity, Egypt's military rulers led by President Sisi have been staging epic neo-Pharaonic displays, but this has dark roots linked to European fascism and 20th-century revisionism, writes Kyle J. Anderson
While the KRG has established policies for Syrian refugees in Kurdistan to live and work legally, these provisions have not translated into sustainable livelihoods and economic prosperity, resulting in unrealised potential, writes Caroline Zullo.
Opinion: Hariri's departure after nine months of trying - and failing - to form a government suggests that the time has come for a new generation of leaders to take over, writes Imad K. Harb.
While queer representation in "Perfect Strangers"Â has been welcomed by LGBTQ Arabs and their allies, it will take time to see how this inclusion battle unfolds and the long-term results it will yield for the larger Arab society, writes Izat Elamoor.
The risk that the UN will reimpose economic sanctions on Iran hangs over the presidency of hardliner Ebrahim Raisi. This threat may be Raisi’s strongest incentive to reach a compromise in the ongoing nuclear talks, writes Djavad Salehi-Isfahani.
Global travel restrictions on Iranians is a major blow to their right to engage with the world. Responsibility in reversing these restrictions not only lies on powerful countries, but more crucially with Iran's authorities, writes Kourosh Ziabari.
The case of a Jordanian taxi driver, arrested seven years ago for alleged drug smuggling despite questionable evidence, illustrates how the Saudi Arabia has one law for its princes and another for the rest, writes Anthony Harwood.
Israel does not fear an Iranian nuclear weapon, what it truly fears is a regional economic rival who could upend the status quo in regards to the Palestinians, writes Richard Silverstein.
A US role in helping prop up autocrats and dictators led to the demise of political Islam and democracy in the Middle East, writes Emile Nakhleh.
Zakaria Zubeidi's story illustrates that no matter if Palestinians choose armed struggle or non-violent means, Israel will always choose war, writes Abu Bakr Bashir.