After a dramatic shift in Arab Gulf states鈥 thinking, they suddenly may have the most to offer Iran to bring about compromise on a nuclear deal.
Jordan鈥檚 Parliament is a once-revered institution. To restore its stature, is it enough to improve representation without giving it a stronger voice?
Viewed from outside Sudan, the deal ending a coup was a diplomatic triumph. But on Sudan鈥檚 streets, protesters say their voices are being ignored.
Should accountability for misdeeds be sacrificed on behalf of national unity? That鈥檚 a question Libya is grappling with in an election with few rules.
Israel-Jordan ties are thawing, and the climate crisis 鈥 and its focus on water and renewable energy 鈥 is giving the countries something to talk about.
The U.S. is invested in helping Sudan toward democracy. But the coup poses a challenge: How far should the Biden administration go to reach that goal?
Amid government dysfunction, Lebanon has become unrecognizable to its own people. To provide for their most basic needs, they must rely on each other.
The symbolic victory seen in the naming of a woman as Tunisia鈥檚 prime minister comes amid a deepening battle over the nation鈥檚 democratic character.
Jordan鈥檚 鈥渨heat is a blessing鈥 initiative is reviving cultivation of a hearty ancient grain. At stake are food security and a fading pastoral culture.
A U.S.-backed thaw in Palestinian-Israeli relations has yielded modest gains, but many Palestinians question their leadership鈥檚 legitimacy.
The 鈥渃lash of civilizations鈥 expected after 9/11 has been mediated by the rise of cross-cultural embraces between the West and the Muslim and Arab world.
In a post-U.S. Afghanistan, several jihadist groups are competing for influence. Who are they and what will this mean for the country and its neighbors?
In Salt, Jordan, the world鈥檚 newest UNESCO World Heritage Site, history and architecture have created a model of interfaith and communal harmony.
In Tunisia, a presidential power grab that seized on deadlock and pandemic pressures is winning support among a public increasingly down on democracy.
Tunisia, a young democracy, faces a challenge linked to its past but recognizable worldwide: police violence in marginalized communities.
Will the mandate from Ethiopia鈥檚 elections help heal a conflict-ridden society 鈥 or deepen the dispute over national identity?
Mobilized by the killing of a political activist, Palestinian protesters are saying their increasingly autocratic president, Mahmoud Abbas, must go.
Leaks and rumors over the closed-door Jordan coup trial are spurring many who saw the royal family as a bedrock of stability to question its role.
Egypt seeks to regain its Arab world leadership; that matches Washington鈥檚 search for allies to uphold regional security and stability.
How do you build back from war when the building itself is political? Residents of Gaza who lost homes and livelihoods face a long path to recovery.