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Fawaz A. Gerges is a Professor of international relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science where he also holds the Emirates Chair in Contemporary Middle Eastern Studies at LSE. He was the LSE’s inaugural Director of the Middle East Centre from 2010 until 2013. He earned a doctorate from Oxford University and M.Sc. from the London School of Economics and Political Science. He has taught at Oxford, Harvard, and Columbia, and was a research scholar at Princeton and chairholder at Sarah Lawrence College, New York. He is author of several acclaimed books, including two newly released: Making the Arab World (Princeton University Press, April 2018) The Hundred Years’ War for Control of the Middle East: From Sykes-Pico to the Deal of the Century (Princeton University Press, April 2020). His other books include: ISIS: A History (Princeton University Press, February 2016); The New Middle East: Social Protest and Revolution in the Arab World (Cambridge University Press, 2013); Contentious Politics in the Middle East: Popular Resistance and Marginalised Activism beyond the Arab Uprisings (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015); Obama and the Middle East (Palgrave and MacMillan, 2012); The Rise and Fall of Al Qaeda (Oxford University Press, 2011); The Far Enemy: Why Jihad Went Global (Cambridge University Press, 2009). His articles have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The Christian Science Monitor, International Herald Tribune, The Guardian; The Independent, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Newsweek, Middle East Journal, Survival, the Guardian, and many others. Gerges has given hundreds of tv and radio interviews for top talk and news shows and programs on various media outlets throughout the world, including BBC, Sky, CNN, ABC, PBS, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, NPR, CBC. He has been the recipient of a MacArthur, Fullbright and Carnegie Fellowships and his books have been translated into a number of foreign languages.
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The Islamic State Has Not Been Defeated
The territorial rule of the Islamic State has ended, but the group remains ideologically and operationally active. The premature declaration of victory by President Trump overlooks the persistent issues that allow extremist groups to thrive, such as governance crises and the Saudi-Iran rivalry. The Islamic State has shown resilience and adaptability, capitalizing on the sense of injustice among Sunni Muslims. The ongoing geopolitical and sectarian conflicts in the Middle East continue to provide opportunities for the group to rebound.
A diplomatic breakthrough is a long way off in Syria’s deadly war
The Syrian conflict remains uncontrolled and disturbing, with a fragile truce in Aleppo barely holding. John Kerry's efforts to inspire confidence in US diplomacy for a solution to Syria's six-year civil war are challenged by the complex situation on the ground. The moderate opposition, particularly the Free Syrian Army, is caught between Assad's forces and militant Islamists, with their stronghold in Aleppo under threat. The Geneva talks have made little progress, and Assad's regime, backed by Iran and Russia, rejects a political transition, instead proposing a national unity government under Assad's rule. The international community's focus on the threat of Isis and terrorism overshadows the need for political transition. The US, under Obama, has taken a backseat to Russia's dominant role in the conflict, with Putin using Syria as leverage for broader geopolitical negotiations. The unwavering support from Iran for Assad and the regional proxy war with Saudi Arabia further complicate the prospects for a diplomatic breakthrough, raising concerns about the ongoing humanitarian disaster and its repercussions on regional and global security.
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