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  • English Newsletter May 11

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Al Majalla’s cover story last week tackled Iran’s sleeper cells and its bid to export disorder in the Gulf amid a shaky US-Iran ceasefire. For his part, Subhi Franjieh looks at Iran’s attempts to destabilise Syria through its proxy groups in Lebanon and Iraq, and Lina Khatib sheds light on Europe’s key role in keeping Hezbollah’s finances afloat. Meanwhile, Thuraya Shahin pens a piece titled Strings attached: Lebanon’s economic rescue tied to its openness to Israel. In it, she says, “Israel wants to draw Lebanon into a framework in which economic incentives eclipse strategic considerations.”

Meanwhile, Con Coughlin explains how Pakistan is proving its utility as a US-Iran mediator, while Yang Xiaotong argues that a cornered Iran is also a problem for China. Read both articles to learn the reasons why. And Rustum Mahmoud looks at How the Iran war changed Türkiye’s security calculus. “Ankara’s national security priority is no longer Kurds or Gülenists, but Israel. Likewise, in Tel Aviv, Türkiye is increasingly seen as a likely future Israeli adversary. Both are preparing accordingly,” he writes.

Meanwhile, Abdel-Rahman Ayas pens a piece titled Global airfares soar amid ongoing US-Iran turmoil. In it, he says, “Airspace closures, rising fuel costs, shifting flight maps and delayed aircraft deliveries have repriced flights around the world, with some travel routes hit worse than others.”  For his part, Marco Mossad explains how tracking apps offer an unfiltered view of the US-Iran conflict. “The growing popularity of these apps shows how people like the ability to monitor events themselves and draw their own conclusions, without media spin,” he says. And Alex Vatanka examines Iran’s Real splits and the myth of division. In it, he argues that the dispute centres on price and presentation, not on the basic instinct to preserve the revolutionary system. 

And last but not least in Culture, Abdullah Al-Rashid pens a piece titled Arabic calligraphy: the Nabataeans' gift to the world. “From the rock-cut façades of Mada’in Salih to the earliest Koranic manuscripts, a quiet transformation in Nabataean writing gave rise to one of the world’s most enduring scripts,” he writes.  And El-Sayed Hussein interviews Algerian writer Said Khatibi, who recently won the  International Prize for Arabic Fiction for his novel Swimming Against the Tide, which chronicles half a century of Algerian history, from World War II to the early 1990s. 

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Politics

Gulf states take on Iran’s sleeper cells

Al Majalla reveals how these units have evolved into cross-border operational networks targeting security and economic infrastructure

READ THE FULL ARTICLE
img Politics

Iran’s bid to export disorder across the Gulf

The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and its proxy Hezbollah have been activating sleeper cells embedded across the Gulf States, but many have been found and detained.

img Business & Economy

How Europe helps keep Hezbollah in business

Europe is a key money-laundering hub for the funds Hezbollah generates worldwide and a central node in the trade routes through which those funds are moved and disguised

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Global airfares soar amid ongoing US-Iran turmoil

Business & Economy

Airspace closures, rising fuel costs, shifting flight maps and delayed aircraft deliveries have repriced flights around the world, with some travel routes hit worse than others

Abdel-Rahman Ayas
MOST READ IN OPINION:

Real Iran splits and the myth of division

Alex Vatanka

How the Iran war changed Türkiye’s security calculus

Rustum Mahmud

Pakistan proves its utility as a US-Iran mediator

Con Coughlin
img Science & Technology

Tracking apps offer unfiltered view into the US-Iran conflict

The growing popularity of these apps shows how people like the ability to monitor events themselves and draw their own conclusions, without media spin

img Business & Economy

Strings attached: Lebanon’s economic rescue tied to its openness to Israel

Proponents of a peace deal argue that by reducing security risks with Israel, Lebanon can move from a volatile frontier market into a regional hub much like the UAE.

img Culture & Social Affairs

Arabic calligraphy: the Nabataeans' gift to the world

From the rock-cut façades of Mada'in Salih to the earliest Koranic manuscripts, a quiet transformation in Nabataean writing gave rise to one of the world's most enduring scripts

img Culture & Social Affairs

Said Khatibi on confronting Algeria’s Black Decade

After winning the International Prize for Arabic Fiction, the Algerian novelist reflects on memory, violence, and his country's unresolved past

POLITICS
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Why a cornered Iran is also a problem for China

Even when appeals to open the Hormuz Strait come from a close ally like Beijing, they fall on deaf ears in Tehran. But hope is not yet lost.

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