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  • English Newsletter June 22

Weekly Newsletter

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Al Majalla’s cover story last week covered the historic US-Iran deal from a range of perspectives. Robert Ford explains how the agreement differs from Obama’s 2015 JCPOA, while Kaswar Klara gives his insights on Pakistan’s pivotal role in brokering the Memorandum of Understanding. Providing the Gulf perspective is Zaid bin Ali al-Fadhil, while Michael Horowitz explains why Israel was left out of the deal.

For his part, Sharif Mohammad asserts that although Hormuz is open, states will still invest in workarounds, while Ibrahim Hamidi warns the agreement is still strewn with mines, much like the Strait itself. Can the agreement get over the 60-day mark? Con Coughlin warns of the difficulties. Meanwhile, Ahmed Maher interviews Luigi Di Maio, the EU Representative for the Gulf, who details how Brussels has responded to the US-Iran war and the concrete steps it has taken to help its GCC allies.

Moving on to the World Cup, Abdul Fattah Khattab explains how FIFA turned the football tournament into a giant cash cow, while Marco Mossad pens a piece titled A smarter ball, or a safer one? The header dilemma facing world football. “The official World Cup ball showcases the latest advances in football technology, but new research questions whether future designs should prioritise brain safety as well as performance, he writes.” And finally, Najeeb Mubarak traces the evolution of World Cup Songs.

Switching gears, Omer Onhon explains how Türkiye’s opposition is now a shell of its former self. “Since the CHP defeated the ruling AKP party in the 2024 local elections, its leaders have either been deposed or imprisoned, in what its supporters call a targeted campaign,” he says. And last but not least, Leila Amar interviews French actress and director Noémie Merlant in Cannes, on her latest and greatest works.

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Politics

Trump’s deal: repercussions in the Gulf, Iran, and Israel

The MOU reached by the two warring nations forces a rethink of the Middle East's political, security, and economic landscape

READ THE FULL ARTICLE
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Trump’s Iran truce leaves Israel out

Washington reportedly refused to show Israel a draft of the MOU when asked. Therefore, without its buy-in, Israel is not obliged to adhere to the deal.

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Hormuz opens, but states will still invest in workarounds

After 15 weeks of effective closure, shipping routes, energy markets, and supply chains have been reshaped, leaving changes that could endure long after the war has ended

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How Pakistan quietly brokered the historic US-Iran deal

Politics

Islamabad kept both sides talking even as missiles were being launched. That tenacity looks to have paid dividends in a way that could yet reshape the Middle East's power dynamics.

Kaswar Klasra
MOST READ IN OPINION:

Hormuz may reopen, but the deal is strewn with mines

Ibrahim Hamidi

Can Trump's Iran deal make it over the 60-day line?

Con Coughlin

Türkiye’s opposition is now a shell of its former self 

Omer Onhon
img Science & Technology

A smarter ball, or a safer one? The header dilemma facing world football

The official World Cup ball showcases the latest advances in football technology, but new research questions whether future designs should prioritise brain safety as well as performance

img Culture & Social Affairs

World Cup songs: from local themes to global industry

Football's biggest tournament has come to adopt a single soundtrack every four years to give each offering a distinct identity. Is this genuine culture, or a mass marketing technique?

img Culture & Social Affairs

Up close and personal with Noémie Merlant in Cannes

Just a stone's throw from the Croisette, Al Majalla met the French director and actress in a setting worlds apart from the frenzy of the international film festival

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How FIFA turned the World Cup into a giant cash cow

Billions of dollars are streaming into the Swiss-based organisation from broadcasting rights, advertising revenue, and ticket and hospitality sales, but have the fans been left high and dry?

POLITICS
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Luigi Di Maio on Europe's role in boosting Gulf security

In an interview with Al Majalla, the EU Representative for the Gulf details how Brussels has responded to the US-Iran war and the concrete steps it has taken to help its GCC allies

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