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Content Feed - 3 Items

Webinars & Events

  • Featured Speakers
    QatarThe GCC

    Seeking an End to the GCC Crisis: Is a Solution Imminent?

    Dec 10, 2020

    On December 10, 2020, Arab Center Washington DC Executive Director Khalil E. Jahshan hosted Dr. Majed Al-Ansari in a virtual briefing titled “Seeking an End to…

  • Panel Discussions
    QatarThe GCC

    The GCC Crisis in Context

    Sep 26, 2017

    On September 26, 2017, Arab Center Washington DC (ACW) hosted a panel of experts to discuss some of the salient issues in the current Gulf crisis.

  • Panel Discussions
    QatarThe GCC

    The Future of the GCC: Regional and International Implications

    Aug 30, 2017

    Arab Center Washington DC (ACW) hosted on August 30, 2017 a panel discussion on the future of the GCC and the implications of the rift for the region and the w…

Content Feed - 5 Items

Latest Publications

  • Policy Analysis
    The Arabian Peninsula and The GulfUS Foreign Policy

    Gauging Gulf Responses to President Biden’s Middle East Diplomacy

    Aug 31, 2022Jon Hoffman

    When examining how the members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) perceived and reacted to US President Joe Biden’s July visit to the Middle East, the Gulf …

  • Policy Analysis
    The Arabian Peninsula and The GulfThe GCC

    The Biden Presidency and the Gulf Arab States

    Assessing the Biden Administration’s future relations with the Gulf, Kristian Coates Ulrichsen writes that it faces a set of difficult challenges on a number o…

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Current Openings FTE

Current Openings

Fellow for US Government Affairs

Arab Center Washington DC is hiring a Fellow for US Government Affairs, based in Washington, DC, on a full-time basis.

The Fellow for US Government Affairs will monitor activities in the three branches of the US government (Congress, the White House and Executive Branch, and the Judicial Branch) and prepare a weekly report (Washington Policy Weekly) of all activities pertaining to the Middle East. The fellow will provide Arab Center executives and researchers with daily analyses of legislative and policy issues related to US policy in the Middle East. S/he will initiate and maintain regular contact and professional relationships with relevant congressional staff serving on the foreign affairs committees and other committees or subcommittees dealing with Arab world and Middle East issues as well as with federal government employees at relevant agencies and departments.

Deadline: August 31, 2021.
Salary commensurate with experience.

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  • There are no resources at this time. Please check back later.

  • Policy Analysis
    The Arabian Peninsula and The GulfUS Foreign Policy

    Gauging Gulf Responses to President Biden’s Middle East Diplomacy

    Aug 31, 2022Jon Hoffman

    When examining how the members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) perceived and reacted to US President Joe Biden’s July visit to the Middle East, the Gulf …

  • Policy Analysis
    JordanThe GCC

    Jordan Maneuvers in GCC Politics to Protect Its Interests

    Despite its heavy dependence on the GCC for economic aid and employment for its workforce, Jordan has been able to pursue political positions not always in syn…

  • Fresh Take
    QatarThe GCC

    The Current Status of the GCC Crisis

    Jan 13, 2023

    Imad K. Harb discusses the current status of multilateral relations among Gulf Arab states, the issues they have yet to resolve, and their agreements and diffe…

  • Policy Analysis
    The Arabian Peninsula and The GulfUS Foreign Policy

    Gauging Gulf Responses to President Biden’s Middle East Diplomacy

    Aug 31, 2022Jon Hoffman

    When examining how the members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) perceived and reacted to US President Joe Biden’s July visit to the Middle East, the Gulf …

  • There are no resources at this time. Please check back later.

  • Policy Analysis
    North AfricaDemocracy and Governance

    Tunisia Struggles to Project Foreign Policy Independence

    Aug 22, 2019Daniel Brumberg

    Tunisia’s leaders would do well to balance their hopes for democracy and human rights with the pragmatic exigencies of an independent foreign policy that prote…

  • Washington Policy Weekly
    EgyptThe GCC

    Congressional Update – April 11, 2016

    Apr 11, 2016

    I. Iran:On April 5, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC) held a hearing on Iran’s compliance with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Test…

  • There are no resources at this time. Please check back later.

  • There are no resources at this time. Please check back later.

How did World War I set Palestine on the path toward the Nakba?

In Brief: World War I set Palestine on the path toward the Nakba because Britain’s wartime deals, broken promises, violent conquest, and later Mandate policies enabled Zionist settlement, denied Palestinian self-determination, and created the political conditions that led to mass displacement in 1948.

In More Detail: Britain sealed Palestine’s fate before it had conquered the territory, setting its people on a course of death and destruction that would reach a peak in the 1948 Nakba. In the midst of World War I (1914-1918), Britain and France planned for the removal of the Ottoman Empire from its Arab provinces. In a secret agreement known as Sykes-Picot (1916), Britain and France divided the territories between themselves, creating, in broad outline, the map of the modern Middle East that we know today.

Meanwhile, Britain made two, mutually exclusive promises to two groups, each conflicting with British and French plans to control the region following the war’s end. First, in a series of communications known as the Hussein-McMahon Correspondence (1915-1916), Britain promised a prominent Arab leader in the Arabian Peninsula, Sharif Hussein of Mecca, an Arab state, which was understood by the leader to include Palestine, in exchange for his support in rallying an Arab rebellion against the Ottoman leadership. Second, Britain promised a “Jewish national homeland” in Palestine to Zionist leaders in Britain through a communication known as the Balfour Declaration (1917).

If avenues for self-determination were precluded prior to Britain’s military takeover in Palestine, the physical arrival of the British in the territory made matters even worse for Palestinians. Britain’s campaign to conquer Palestine and Jerusalem began in March 1917, first in Rafah, then Khan Younis, then Gaza City. Ottoman defenses were fierce; the British anticipated a swift victory and path to Jerusalem, but resistance in Gaza City was so strong that it evaded surrender until November 1917, and eventually Jerusalem was occupied in December 1917.

Gaza City was utterly decimated by the British campaign. In addition to artillery bombardment, new military technology enabled the British military to launch air raids on Gaza City, terrorizing the local population, with many fleeing their homes until the campaign ended, and many returning to find their homes, and much of Gaza City, in total ruin. On December 11, 1917, General Edmund Allenby entered Jerusalem and declared martial law. Palestine was placed under the Occupied Enemy Territory Administration (OETA), a system of joint British-French military rule over recently conquered Ottoman territories in the Levant.

After the war, Allied powers set up mandates over former Ottoman territories. Effectively, this system formalized the secret Sykes-Picot agreement, but with a caveat: Amid the US emphasis on self-determination following US President Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points address (1918), delivered in the final months of the war, Britain and France presented their control over the region as temporary tutelage, rather than formal colonialism. By declaring these territories “mandates,” Britain and France declared that they were preparing the peoples living under this system for eventual self-determination and independence.

The British Mandate for Palestine was established in 1920, but it was clear from the outset that Britain had no intention of relinquishing control or ceding room for Palestinians to transition to independence and statehood. Further, the language of the Balfour Declaration was incorporated into the Palestine Mandate submitted by Britain to the League of Nations. The result was formal British recognition of and cooperation with the Jewish Agency—the governing body of the Jewish community in Palestine prior to Israel’s establishment, headed by Zionist leaders—and this was enshrined in the British Mandate for Palestine, affirming its commitment to facilitating Jewish immigration to Palestine, which British authorities understood to be linked to the Zionist project. Overall, Britain’s violent entry to Palestine, callous destruction of Palestinian homes and lives, and suppression of Palestinian independence would be the rule, not the exception, which eventually created the conditions for the Nakba.

Affiliated Centers

Homepage – Levant Feed

  • There are no resources at this time. Please check back later.

  • Policy Analysis
    The Arabian Peninsula and The GulfUS Foreign Policy

    Gauging Gulf Responses to President Biden’s Middle East Diplomacy

    Aug 31, 2022Jon Hoffman

    When examining how the members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) perceived and reacted to US President Joe Biden’s July visit to the Middle East, the Gulf …

  • Policy Analysis
    JordanThe GCC

    Jordan Maneuvers in GCC Politics to Protect Its Interests

    Despite its heavy dependence on the GCC for economic aid and employment for its workforce, Jordan has been able to pursue political positions not always in syn…

Homepage – North Africa Feed

  • There are no resources at this time. Please check back later.

  • Policy Analysis
    North AfricaDemocracy and Governance

    Tunisia Struggles to Project Foreign Policy Independence

    Aug 22, 2019Daniel Brumberg

    Tunisia’s leaders would do well to balance their hopes for democracy and human rights with the pragmatic exigencies of an independent foreign policy that prote…

  • Washington Policy Weekly
    EgyptThe GCC

    Congressional Update – April 11, 2016

    Apr 11, 2016

    I. Iran:On April 5, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC) held a hearing on Iran’s compliance with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Test…

Homepage – The Arabian Peninsula and The Gulf Feed

  • Fresh Take
    QatarThe GCC

    The Current Status of the GCC Crisis

    Jan 13, 2023

    Imad K. Harb discusses the current status of multilateral relations among Gulf Arab states, the issues they have yet to resolve, and their agreements and diffe…

  • Policy Analysis
    The Arabian Peninsula and The GulfUS Foreign Policy

    Gauging Gulf Responses to President Biden’s Middle East Diplomacy

    Aug 31, 2022Jon Hoffman

    When examining how the members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) perceived and reacted to US President Joe Biden’s July visit to the Middle East, the Gulf …

Homepage – The Horn of Africa Feed

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Affiliated Centers

ACW is affiliated with the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies(ACRPS) and it's network of research centers around the world. Headquartered in Doha, Qatar, ACRPS is one of the premier independent research institutes in the Arab region.

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