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  • English Newsletter 20 July 2026

Weekly Newsletter

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As part of our Cover story package, Michael Horowitz examines how Türkiye-Israel relations nosedived, leading to the 2026 face-off between Ankara and Tel Aviv, not least over Syria.

Elsewhere, Anwar al-Ansi looks at the latest fighting in the western Yemeni city of Hodeidah, which has an important deep-water port. It is the latest clash between the Houthis and the internationally-recognised government.

Over to Asia, and Charbel Barakat turns the lens on China's septuagenarian leader Xi Jinping, with the question that is never asked and never answered: who will succeed him?

On a different note, Bryn Haworth kicks off with the argument that there is too much politics in the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Or has it always been thus?

In Opinion, Mohannad Mubaideen argues that Jordan has done well to fight the fires of the Middle East to stop them at the gates, but that further reforms are needed if the country is to fulfil its potential.

Perceptive as ever, Haid Haid raises the issue of an activist's arrest in Syria, which triggered protests. The government has to strike a balance between forward progression and justice for past crimes. Is it?

In the Gulf, Zaid al-Fadheil shows how Arab states are stuck between the religious extremists in Tehran and the religious extremists in Tel Aviv, asking how they should escape these twin fires

In Business, Amr Emam explains how Egypt's government is relaxing rules of foreign ownership of property in the country. There has been a building boom but domestic demand is weak.

From land to sea, and Abdel-Rahman Ayas dives into the Strait of Malacca, another important maritime chokepoint, where Singapore seeks to steady the ship amidst the roiling waves of the Gulf and elsewhere.

In Culture, Mohamed Magdy reminisces over two lost dynamic communities of Egypt - its Jews and Greeks - tracing their past through the relics of the present in Cairo and elsewhere.

To literature now, and Yazan al-Hajj shows how the fourth Arden series continues a tradition that has repeatedly transformed the study of Shakespeare, but not yet for Arabic readers.

Finally, our Profile this week is of FIFA President Gianni Infantino. As Christopher Philips notes, the controversial head of an organisation that has just made $15bn from the World Cup looks likely to be re-elected. 

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Politics

Why Israel-Türkiye relations have now hit rock bottom

Tel Aviv and Ankara were once so friendly that they shared intelligence and cooperated militarily. Today, they accuse each other of genocide and limit trade. Where next for these two regional rivals?

READ THE FULL ARTICLE
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Fighting in Yemen suggests a spillover from the US-Iran war

Clashes in the vital port city of Hodeidah were curiously timed, so soon after a senior Houthi delegation attended the funeral in Iran of the late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei

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Xi Jinping and China’s deferred succession question

China's all-powerful president turned 73 last month, but there is still no word on his successor. The 2027 Communist Party Congress may offer clues about the next generation

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World Cup politics: something ugly in the beautiful game

Politics

Football at the highest level is no stranger to controversy, and World Cup tournaments are not immune to political intervention. Still, 2026 is proving to be much more than a talking point

Bryn Haworth
MOST READ IN OPINION:

To the promised land: the Jordan that is possible

Mohannad Mubaideen

Syria cannot counter incitement with opaque and selective arrests

Haid Haid

The Gulf states are caught between two fires of extremism

Zaid bin Ali al-Fadhil
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Egypt opens its property market to foreign buyers

As the country seeks more direct investment, a period of overbuilding and weak domestic demand means that there are plenty of assets to choose from, but are prices inflated?

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Fighting in the Gulf renews focus on the Strait of Malacca

Once a port at the entrance to the Strait of Malacca, Singapore is now a hub for managing risk in international trade. There are broader lessons for countries dependent on energy flows

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How Egypt lost two of its most dynamic communities

A new book explores how Egypt's Jewish and Greek communities helped build the country's modern economy—and why they ultimately disappeared

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The Arden Shakespeare and the reinvention of the canon

The fourth Arden series continues a tradition that has repeatedly transformed the study of Shakespeare. Yet for Arabic readers, these revolutions still arrive only as distant echoes

POLITICS
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Gianni Infantino: controversial FIFA boss reflects political change

Due to be re-elected for an unprecedented fourth term in March, the president of FIFA has monetised the World Cup and filtered that money down to football associations around the world

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