Afleveringen
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Middle East Breakdown with Dan FefermanOur latest episode features special guest Emily Neilson, a Middle East analyst and researcher.In this conversation, we take a deep dive into the structure, history, and influence of the Muslim Brotherhood, examining how the movement operates across different countries and regions throughout the Middle East and North Africa. We explore its organizational methods, political strategy, and the ways its ideology has shaped various movements and actors across the region.We also discuss some of the most important issues shaping the Middle East today, including the wars and political developments involving Hamas, Lebanon, Sudan, and other key regional flashpoints. The episode provides historical context, expert analysis, and a broader look at how these interconnected events influence the region's future.If you enjoy in depth conversations, regional analysis, and expert perspectives that go beyond the headlines, make sure to subscribe and support our work. Your support helps us continue producing more conversations like this and bringing knowledgeable voices from across the Middle East to our audience.
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Uncover the hidden dynamics shaping the Iran negotiations and the future of regional security. In this episode, our experts go beyond the headlines to reveal the strategic calculus driving Washington’s approach and Tehran’s true intentions. As talks stall, we analyze the broader implications for Middle Eastern stability from fluctuating oil markets to the web of regional proxies and shifting global alliances.We break down the internal power struggles in Iran, including the critical uncertainty surrounding Khamenei’s role and the rising influence of the IRGC. Are they pursuing nuclear dominance at any cost? Our analysis covers the regime’s propaganda machine, the status of proxies from Hezbollah to the Houthis, and the long-term game of missile threats, covert operations, and asymmetric warfare.Why does the U.S. continue negotiations despite the red flags? We explore the complex interplay of timing, domestic politics, and regional stakes that define this moment. You’ll learn why a 60-day interim deal might be doing more harm than good and what it means for the future of American and Israeli security policies.📢 Want to dive deeper into these critical insights?Visit our website for exclusive reports and in-depth analysis:👉 https://www.mideastjournal.org/In this episode, we cover:The true state of Iran’s internal leadership and the IRGC’s power grab.Why "restraint" might be a strategic miscalculation.The dangerous reality of asymmetric warfare in the Middle East.What policymakers and security analysts need to know now.Turn on notifications to stay ahead of the curve on the most volatile region in the world.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, hosts Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo sit down with Gregg Roman, Executive Director of the Middle East Forum, for one of the most clear-eyed assessments of the US-Iran war, the fragile ceasefire, and what comes next.Recorded on April 10th, five weeks into the biggest direct military confrontation between the US, Israel, and the Islamic Republic of Iran, the conversation asks the hard questions: Who actually won? What was realistically achieved? And is this ceasefire a genuine opening or just Iran buying time?The panel examines the war as a chapter in 25 years of American foreign policy toward Iran rather than a standalone event, the real state of Iran's nuclear and missile programs after 39 days of strikes, why regime decapitation didn't collapse the Islamic Republic, the IRGC's deep bench and mosaic defense strategy, where US and Israeli war aims overlap and where they diverge, and what the Gulf states, the broader Abrahamic alliance, and the negotiations in Islamabad mean for the future of the region.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.Website: YouTube: / @middleeast_24 Instagram: / middleast24 X: Spotify:
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, hosts Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo mark Israel's 78th Independence Day with one of the most wide-ranging conversations in the show's history, tracing the full arc of the Jewish story from the Holocaust to the refounding of the modern state, the shifting regional landscape around Israel today, and the deepening disconnect between how the Arab world and the Western world view Israel in 2026. Recorded against the backdrop of Yom HaZikaron transitioning into Yom HaAtzmaut, the episode asks what Israel's existence actually means, what it cost, and where it is heading.Joining the discussion is Stefan Tompson, founder of Visegrad24 one of Europe's most influential news aggregators with over 900,000 followers on X and more than a billion impressions in peak months. A London-born content creator and communications specialist of Polish and South African descent, based in Warsaw, Tompson has built Visegrad24 into a platform dedicated to countering disinformation, uplifting Western values, and challenging the media narratives dominant in mainstream European and American outlets. He is also a co-founder of Middle East 24.The panel examines Hayvi Bouzo's firsthand experience visiting Auschwitz as part of the March of the Living delegation of Arab and Muslim leaders, what it revealed about the scale and machinery of the Holocaust, and why that context is inseparable from understanding Israel's founding. The conversation covers the history of Zionism from Herzl and Jabotinsky through Ben-Gurion and the competing visions of what Israel should be, the demographic and ideological shifts inside Israeli society from its socialist founding through the Oslo failure and October 7, and why Israel is one of the only successful decolonization projects in modern history. The panel addresses the radicalization of second and third generation Muslim communities in Western Europe, the role of Qatar and the Muslim Brotherhood in funding the ideological infrastructure behind anti-Israel narratives in Western academia and media, why Arabs across the Middle East are increasingly warming to Israel while Western institutions move in the opposite direction, and what the Abraham Accords represent as a model for the region's future. The episode closes with a forward look at Israel's internal challenges, including the integration of the ultra-Orthodox and Israeli Arab communities, and what it will take to sustain both a Jewish and democratic state.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.Website: https://middleeast24.org
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, host Dan Feferman examines one of the most consequential diplomatic openings in the modern Middle East: the first publicly announced, state-level talks between Lebanon and Israel in decades, held in Washington under Secretary of State Marco Rubio. With a fragile ceasefire between the United States and Iran still holding, and Hezbollah pushing to link the two tracks together, the question of whether Lebanon can finally chart its own course toward peace with Israel has never been more urgent or more complicated.Joining the discussion is Hussain Abdul-Hussain, research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington, D.C., and author of the newly published book The Arab Case for Israel. A Lebanese-Iraqi journalist and analyst who was born and raised in Lebanon, studied at the American University of Beirut, worked as a reporter for the Daily Star, and appears regularly on Lebanese national television, Abdul-Hussain brings a rare insider perspective to the history of Lebanese-Israeli relations, the internal dynamics of Hezbollah, and the evolving public sentiment inside Lebanon's Shia community.The episode examines the full arc of Lebanon's entanglement with armed conflict, from the forced signing of the 1969 Cairo Agreement that allowed Palestinian militias to operate against Israel from Lebanese soil, to the 1983 peace agreement that was killed by Hafez Assad, to Israel's unilateral withdrawal in 2000 and the subsequent failure to disarm Hezbollah under UN Security Council Resolution 1701. The conversation addresses why Hezbollah was not formed as a reaction to Israel but as an extension of the Iranian Islamic Revolution, why a significant portion of Lebanon's Shia community now opposes Hezbollah, and what combination of international pressure, Lebanese consensus, and targeted sanctions could finally force the group to surrender its arms. The panel also explores the ideological and geopolitical role of Qatar in funding the Muslim Brotherhood and shaping the Western media narrative on the region, the myth of ancient Palestinian nationhood as argued in Abdul-Hussain's book, the radicalization of Arab and Muslim American political identity, and why the Abraham Accords model offers a more honest framework for regional progress than the one dominant in Western academic and media circles.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.Website: YouTube: Instagram: X: Spotify:
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, hosts Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo sit down with senior Middle East and national security analyst Ahmed Quraishi, reporting live from a locked-down Islamabad as US-Iran negotiations are hours away from beginning.Recorded on April 10th, with the 12-day ceasefire just days old and the Islamabad talks yet to start, the conversation asks the questions the rest of the media is missing: What is actually left of the Iranian regime after 39 days of strikes? Why did it survive? And is Iran capable of delivering real concessions on nuclear, missile, and proxy programs without the regime ceasing to exist?The panel examines why the Basij, not the IRGC, is the force that kept the regime alive, what the repeated strikes on Chabahar and Abadan signal about Iran's minority regions, why Pakistan's credibility is now on the line, what the Gulf states are quietly preparing for, and whether there is a new class inside the IRGC willing to make a deal.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.Website: mideastjournal.orgYouTube: @middleeast_24Instagram: @middleast24X: @middleeast_24Spotify: The Middle East Breakdown
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, hosts Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo sit down with Gregg Roman, Executive Director of the Middle East Forum, for one of the most clear-eyed assessments of the US-Iran war, the fragile ceasefire, and what comes next.Recorded on April 10th, five weeks into the biggest direct military confrontation between the US, Israel, and the Islamic Republic of Iran, the conversation asks the hard questions: Who actually won? What was realistically achieved? And is this ceasefire a genuine opening or just Iran buying time?The panel examines the war as a chapter in 25 years of American foreign policy toward Iran rather than a standalone event, the real state of Iran's nuclear and missile programs after 39 days of strikes, why regime decapitation didn't collapse the Islamic Republic, the IRGC's deep bench and mosaic defense strategy, where US and Israeli war aims overlap and where they diverge, and what the Gulf states, the broader Abrahamic alliance, and the negotiations in Islamabad mean for the future of the region.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.Website: YouTube: / @middleeast_24 Instagram: / middleast24 X: Spotify:
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, hosts Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo explore the complex and often overlooked struggle of the Kurdish community inside Iran, examining their place within the country's broader ethnic mosaic and what the current regional conflict means for their future. Joining the discussion are Suzan Quitaz, journalist and regional analyst covering Kurdish and Iranian affairs, and Diliman Abdulkader, policy expert specializing in Kurdish self-determination and minority rights across the Middle East.The panel examines the ethnic composition of Iran and the systematic oppression of its minorities, the military capacity and regional influence of Kurdish forces, the fragile but growing push for unity among Iran's non-Persian groups, and what international support or regional alliances would be required for Kurdish self-governance to move from aspiration to reality.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.Website: https://middleeast24.orgYouTube: / @middleeast_24 Instagram: / middleast24 X: https://x.com/middleeast24Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3ZJcMz0
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, hosts Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo examine the ongoing U.S. and Israeli military campaign against the Islamic Republic of Iran, now entering its second week at the time of recording. The discussion covers the strategic objectives driving the strikes, the state of Iran's degraded military capabilities, and the critical question of what comes next for the Iranian people and the broader region.Joining the discussion are Dr. Walid Phares, author of "The Future Jihad," renowned Middle East expert and former Middle East advisor to the first Trump campaign; and Gazelle Sharmahd, human rights activist, spokesperson for the Kingdom Assembly of Iran, and director of the Iran desk at the International Freedom Coalition. Sharmahd brings extraordinary personal testimony as the daughter of Jamshid Sharmahd, a democracy activist abducted, tortured, and executed by the Islamic Republic regime.The panel examines the scope of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran's navy, air defenses, ballistic missile infrastructure, and senior IRGC leadership. The conversation addresses the appointment of Mujtaba Khamenei as successor, the organized nature of the liberation movement inside Iran, mass defections from the armed forces, and the transitional leadership framework coalescing around Crown Prince Pahlavi. The panel also assesses the strategic transformation underway in Lebanon, where Hezbollah is at its weakest point in decades and Lebanese voices are speaking with unprecedented openness against the group, and what a post-Hezbollah order could realistically look like.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.🌐 Website: https://middleeast24.org▶️ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MiddleEast_24📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/middleast24🐦 X: https://x.com/middleeast24🎧 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3ZJcMz0
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, hosts Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo examine the ground reality inside Gaza following the October ceasefire that ended two years of war. Despite the halt in major fighting, Hamas has rapidly moved to reassert control over the 47% of Gaza it still governs, executing perceived opponents, deploying its Ministries of Interior, Commerce, and Finance to extract taxation from a devastated civilian population, and rebuilding its military and administrative infrastructure through what experts describe as a systematic mafia-like operation. The episode interrogates whether the international community's approach to Gaza's post-war transition is fundamentally flawed and what a viable alternative might actually look like.Joining the discussion is Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib, Director and Founder of the Real Line for Palestine initiative at the Atlantic Council and one of the most closely sourced independent analysts on Gaza's internal dynamics. Alkhatib brings firsthand intelligence, field data, and senior-level diplomatic access to his assessment of where Gaza stands today, who Hamas actually is in its current reconstituted form, and whether the transitional structures now being proposed have any realistic chance of success.The panel examines the structural failure of sequencing, specifically the decision to flood Gaza with commercial goods before pursuing Hamas disarmament, and how that mistake has allowed Hamas to collect an estimated $300 million in taxation revenue during the ceasefire period. The conversation probes the shifting Arab regional alignment, the divergence between Emirati and Saudi positioning, and the role Qatar and Turkey are playing in what critics describe as Hamas's attempted rebranding. The hosts and their guest also explore the proposed International Stabilization Force under the Board of Peace framework, its contested mandate, and whether it risks functioning as a buffer that protects rather than constrains Hamas. In a significant moment, Alkhatib publicly outlines for the first time his vision for a model community in Hamas-free northern Gaza, built on three pillars of security, economic opportunity, and cultural transformation, as a potential nucleus for a new Gazan identity rooted in coexistence rather than resistance. The episode closes with a frank assessment of Iran's role as the primary state sponsor sustaining Hamas ideologically and operationally, and what targeted action against the Iranian regime could mean for the broader Israeli-Palestinian dynamic.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.Website: https://middleeast24.orgYouTube: / @middleeast_24 Instagram: / middleast24 X: https://x.com/middleeast24Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3ZJcMz0
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In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, hosts Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo examine the profound political, security, and social transformation Israel has undergone since October 7th exploring how the country's pre-existing fractures shaped its response to the Hamas attack, what the ongoing war has revealed about Israeli strategic doctrine, and where the country is headed as it approaches a pivotal election cycle.Joining the discussion is Yakov Katz, former longtime Editor-in-Chief of The Jerusalem Post, current fellow at the Jewish People Policy Institute, host of the JPPI podcast, and co-author of the national bestselling book "While Israel Slept: How Hamas Surprised the Most Powerful Military in the Middle East." Katz brings decades of experience covering Israeli security, politics, and regional affairs, as well as firsthand insight into Israeli decision-making at the highest levels.The panel examines Israel's failed containment policy toward Hamas and the deeper doctrinal failures that enabled October 7th, drawing parallels to the conceptzia of the 1973 Yom Kippur War. The conversation explores Israel's pre-war political trauma —five elections in three and a half years, the judicial reform crisis, and deep societal polarization and how that instability compounded the national shock of the attack. The discussion addresses the ongoing psychological and physical toll of the war, the rehabilitation of communities in the north and south, and the challenge of national healing following the return of the remaining living hostages. On the political front, the panel analyzes the upcoming Israeli elections, the absence of new political figures, tribal voting patterns, the ultra-Orthodox draft controversy, and the strategic calculations of key figures including Netanyahu, Bennett, Lapid, and potential new entrants. The episode also addresses the Iran nuclear negotiations under the Trump administration, the risk of a repeat of JCPOA-style compromises, and what a military strike or diplomatic deal would mean for Israeli domestic politics and regional security. Finally, the panel reflects on the broader transformation of the Middle East the weakening of Iran's axis, the fall of Assad, Arab world engagement in Gaza's future and what Israel's 80th anniversary in 2028 could look like depending on the choices made in the coming months.Watch, listen, and subscribe for full episodes and regional analysis.Website: https://middleeast24.orgYouTube: / @middleeast_24 Instagram: / middleast24 X: https://x.com/middleeast24Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3ZJcMz0
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ME24 Breakdown digs into the day after in Gaza. We cover what it would take to disarm Hamas, how a multinational authority could work, what role the Palestinian Authority and Arab states can realistically play, and what lessons Iraq, ISIS, Bosnia, and Lebanon offer. Clear analysis, no spin.
Guests, Raith Al Omari, senior fellow at The Washington Institute and former adviser to the Palestinian negotiating team. Robert Silverman, editor in chief of the Jerusalem Strategic Tribune, former senior U.S. diplomat and lecturer at Shalem College.
Chapters,
00:00 Intro and ME24 mission
02:25 Where the war stands now
09:10 Hamas disarmament, military versus political tracks
18:40 Post war models, multinational authority, local governance
32:15 The PA, Arab states, and U.S. leadership
44:20 Risks of insurgency, lessons from ISIS and Bosnia
55:10 Takeaways and next steps
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Abraham Accords at 5 Years | Middle East 24 Podcast
Five years since the signing of the Abraham Accords, our ME24 team sat down to reflect on what has changed, what has endured, and what still lies ahead. In this episode, Hayvi and Dan welcome Dr. Waleed Phares, Mozah, and Aaesha to share their stories, experiences, and insights.
We talk about:
The UAE’s vision of peace and modernization
How the Accords have shaped daily life in Israel and the Gulf
Dr. Waleed Phares’s firsthand perspective on how the Accords were born
What October 7th means for the future of normalization
The challenges and opportunities facing the next chapter of Arab-Israeli cooperation
How younger generations are starting to see each other in new ways
It’s a conversation about resilience, hope, and the hard work of building peace. Join us as we look back on the past five years and ahead to what comes next.
Subscribe to Middle East 24 for more thoughtful conversations about the region, its people, and its future.
🔗 Stay connected with MiddleEast24:
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𝕏 Twitter/X: x.com/middleeast_24