- English Newsletter April 20
Weekly Newsletter
Sign up to receive a selection of Al Majalla articles directly to your inbox every Monday.
Al Majalla’s cover story last week examined emerging alternatives to the Hormuz Strait, as commercial shipping continues to be disrupted by the ongoing US-Iran standoff. We cover Saudi Arabia’s western coast and port of Yanbu, as well as a proposal to turn Syria into a regional oil and trade hub. For his part, Steve Hewitt looks at The tiny waterway that put the global economy into a chokehold. “Control of natural waterways, such as the Strait of Hormuz, represents not just economic clout but pure political power,” he explains.
Meanwhile, Abdulfattah Khattab predicts that, despite the truce, the economic effects of the Iran war will linger. “A two-week truce has sparked a cautious market rebound, but deep anxiety persists over renewed escalation and its impact on global growth and inflation,” he said. For his part, Mohamed Sharki looks at how The Iran war exposed the fragility of Europe’s economy. And Omer Onhon asks Can NATO survive the US-Iran war? after the UK and France said they would stay out of Trump's plan to blockade Iranian ports, in a move that angered Trump and further strained the alliance.
Meanwhile, Kamal Alam offers a behind-the-scenes look at the US-Iran negotiations held in Islamabad on 11 April, with his sources confirming that US Vice President JD Vance had successfully built a rapport with the Iranian delegation, but that talks were scuppled by Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. For his part, Alex Vatanka asks Has Iran's ideology actually hardened? In his piece, he asserts that “The change in tone and presentation of policy isn't a fundamental redirection, but rather the consolidation of a system under pressure.”
Onto Lebanon, and Ibrahim Hamidi opines that the Israel-Lebanon talks just might succeed, pointing to what he views as a changed domestic and regional landscape that allows Beirut control over its own affairs. For his part, Houssam Itani explains that Lebanon’s Shiites are fighting a two-front war. “The first is on the border against Israel, which seeks to seize their land and drive them northwards; the second is within Lebanon itself, against a state that seeks to marginalise them,” he says.
In Culture, Jaber Muhammad Madkahli pens a piece titled Farasan, the literature of the sea, and the poetics of place. In it, he says, “In these pristine Saudi islands, a generation of writers has drawn on life by the sea to produce a body of work shaped by memory, identity, and rapid change.” And finally, Hazem Massoud looks at the life and career of Egyptian filmmaker Daoud Abdel Sayed. “Throughout his career, the renowned director challenged authority, rejected easy answers, and remained rooted in lived experience," he explains.
Unravelling the Hormuz bottleneck
How Saudi networks are redrawing oil, gas, and trade routes
Business & Economy
The tiny waterway that put the global economy into a chokehold
Disruption in the Hormuz can have major implications for global trade, but it also creates opportunities for smaller nations like Iran to become global political players
Business & Economy
The Iran war exposed the fragility of Europe’s economy
Disruption in the Strait of Hormuz and rising energy prices are exposing the structural vulnerabilities of Europe's economy
Tight squeeze: economic effects of Iran war linger despite truce
A two-week truce has sparked a cautious market rebound, but deep anxiety persists over renewed escalation and its impact on global growth and inflation
Abdulfattah KhattabGlimpses of Bush's Iraq debacle appear in Trump's Iran war
Robert FordThe Israel-Lebanon talks just might succeed
Ibrahim HamidiLebanon’s Shiites are fighting a two-front war
Houssam Itani
Politics
Has Iran's ideology actually hardened?
The change in tone and presentation of policy isn't a fundamental redirection, but rather the consolidation of a system under pressure
Politics
‘Kushner and Witkoff spoiled the US-Iran talks’
Sources tell Al Majalla that Iran was able to build a rapport with US Vice President JD Vance in Islamabad, but sensed his hands were tied in the presence of Trump's son-in-law and close friend
Culture & Social Affairs
Daoud Abdel Sayed and the cinema of quiet rebellion
Throughout his career, the renowned Egyptian film director challenged authority, rejected easy answers, and remained rooted in lived experience
Culture & Social Affairs
Farasan, the literature of the sea, and the poetics of place
In these pristine Saudi islands, a generation of writers has drawn on life by the sea to produce a body of work shaped by memory, identity, and rapid change
Can NATO survive the US-Iran war?
The UK and France said on Monday they would stay out of Trump's plan to blockade Iranian ports, in a move likely to anger Trump and increase strains in the alliance.