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  • English Newsletter January 12

Weekly Newsletter

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The sheer number and pace of developments last week were hard to keep up with, but Al Majalla left no base uncovered. From Venezuela to Iran, Yemen and Syria, events moved at lightning speed. Our contributors unpacked complex issues and explained their significance to our readers. For his part, Ravi Agrawal poses 5 unanswered questions about Trump’s Venezuela plan, after it became clear that Maduro’s exit doesn’t mean the end of his government. Meanwhile, Stefanie Butendieck Hjerra profiles Venezuela’s vice president-turned-interim leader Delcy Rodríguez, describing her diplomatic style as “confrontational in tone but cautious in substance, and pursuing a strategy that marries public defiance with quiet pragmatism.” And last but not least, Faisal Faeq explains that The problem with Venezuela's oil is technical, not political. “Venezuela’s ultra-heavy crude requires hundreds of billions of dollars in sustained investment in upstream, upgrading, logistics, and export infrastructure,” he writes.

Switching gears, Arash Azizi opines that Change is coming in Iran after nearly two weeks of anti-government protests that have rocked the country. “Khamenei has struck a defiant tone amid growing protests against his regime, but a series of regional setbacks, coupled with an emboldened Trump, could finally bring it down,” he says. 

Our writers also weighed in on the troubling developments in Syria, where government clashes with SDF fighters in Aleppo worried observers about the possibility of an all-out civil war. Omer Onhon warns that Clashes in Aleppo may be the creaking before the earthquake. For his part, Haid Haid covered the tenuous ceasefire in place at the time of publication, asking: What next for Syria? He says, "It remains unclear whether Damascus's move to kick the Kurds out of Aleppo will pressure the SDF to implement the 10 March deal to integrate its forces into the Syrian army or harden its resolve to resist."

Meanwhile, Michael Harari weighs in on the Israel-Syria security negotiations held in Paris last week, where he says Damascus appeared to be more confident in its stance, but warns Israel could be dragging its feet as it currently enjoys a free hand for manoeuvre in Syria and wants to buy time to suss out Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa's intentions and capabilities. 

For his part, Abdullah F. Alrebh explains Saudi Arabia’s red line in Yemen, where it made its position clear over threats to the country’s unity and territorial integrity after foreign-backed southern separatists tried to seize territory earlier this month. Meanwhile, Samer Elias combs through recently released meeting minutes between presidents George W. Bush and Vladimir Putin, pointing out how the Russian leader foreshadowed the Ukraine war in 2008 and how Washington was well aware of Moscow's grievances over NATO expansion, but went ahead anyway.

In global health, World Health Organisation Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus lays out his organisation’s key achievements in 2025, while outlining its priorities for 2026. Read his piece to find out what they are.

And finally, in Culture, Houssam Maarouf writes from Gaza, where he visits destroyed and damaged markets, describing it as a “destruction of memory”. And Yasmin Abdallah bids farewell to Alexandria’s historic tram after a glorious 160-year run. “ The pace of life in the Egyptian city has forced change, replacing the much-loved old carriages holding memories of a bygone age,” she writes.

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Politics

5 unanswered questions about Trump’s Venezuela plan

Maduro's exit doesn't mean the end of his government

READ THE FULL ARTICLE
img Profiles

Delcy Rodríguez and Venezuela’s politics of survival

Venezuela's vice president is known for having a diplomatic style that is confrontational in tone but cautious in substance, and pursuing a strategy that marries public defiance with quiet pragmatism

img Business & Economy

The problem with Venezuela's oil is technical, not political

Tighter US control over Venezuelan exports won't necessarily redirect barrels, reshape trade flows, or alter global supply balances

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Change is coming in Iran

Politics

Khamenei has struck a defiant tone amid growing protests against his regime, but a series of regional setbacks, coupled with an emboldened Trump, could finally bring it down

Arash Azizi
MOST READ IN OPINION:

Clashes in Aleppo may be the creaking before the earthquake

Omer Onhon

Israel-Syria security talks make headway in Paris

Michael Harari

2025 global health achievements and 2026 priorities

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
img Politics

Saudi Arabia's red line in Yemen explained

Overcoming Yemen's fragmentation requires more support for the Riyadh-led path—one that rejects secession, all militias and institutionalises the state

img Documents & Memoirs

Putin foreshadowed the Ukraine war in 2008 meeting with Bush

Recently declassified meeting minutes between the two leaders show how Washington was well aware of Moscow's grievances over NATO expansion, but went ahead anyway

img Culture & Social Affairs

The destruction of Gaza’s markets is the destruction of memory

Places that pulsed with daily life are now reduced to rubble, and the effects are much greater than simply a loss of trade. The power of the old markets went far beyond stalls and sales.

img Culture & Social Affairs

Alexandria bids farewell to its historic tram

More than 160 years after the first tram was inaugurated in the Egyptian city, the pace of life has forced change, replacing the much-loved old carriages holding memories of a bygone age

POLITICS
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What next for Syria after tenuous Aleppo ceasefire?

It remains unclear if Damascus's move to kick the Kurds out of Aleppo will pressure the SDF to implement the 10 March deal to integrate its forces into the Syrian army or harden its resolve to resist

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