Middle East Policy Expert

Robert Satloff

11 articles 2001–2008

Robert Satloff is the executive director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and a leading expert on U.S. Middle East policy and Arab politics. He contributed essays and analysis to The Weekly Standard between 2001 and 2008, covering topics including Palestinian governance, Hamas, U.S. public diplomacy in the Arab world, and broader regional strategy. He is the author of several books on the Middle East and a frequent commentator on American foreign policy.

Just Like Us! Really?

May 12, 2008 · Robert Satloff, Features, Magazine

On the inside back cover of books published by Gallup Press there is the following breathtaking statement:

Hip, Hip, Al Hurra!

November 6, 2006 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

AMERICAN PUBLIC DIPLOMACY in the Middle East did not have a good week. An Arabic-speaking State Department official named Alberto Fernandez made news on October 21 when he spoke too candidly about U.S. missteps in Iraq on Al Jazeera, the Arabic satellite television channel based in Qatar. Not only…

The Rogues Strike Back

July 24, 2006 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

Iran thumbs its nose at Western diplomats and continues nuclear enrichment. Hamas's chief, speaking from Damascus, boasts about kidnapping an Israeli soldier. Hezbollah launches a cross-border raid, prompting Israeli retaliation in Beirut and a return volley of rockets on northern Israel. Just…

Hobbling Hamas

April 3, 2006 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

LAST WEEK, one of the world's deadliest terrorist organizations--the Islamic Resistance Movement, aka Hamas--announced that it has formed a cabinet and is now poised to take effective control of the Palestinian Authority, which governs Gaza and the Palestinian population of the West Bank. This…

The Brain Drain That Wasn't

July 25, 2005 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

IS THERE A FOREIGN-student crisis in American higher education? Last November, the Institute of International Education reported "the first absolute decline in foreign enrollments" at American colleges and universities in more than three decades. Overnight, the 2.4 percent one-year drop in foreign…

Memo to: Karen P. Hughes

March 28, 2005 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR NOMINATION AS undersecretary of state for public diplomacy. Though this is a third-level State Department appointment, with an office about a half-mile away from your former prime spot in the West Wing of the White House, it is actually one of the most important jobs in the…

Getting Gaza Right

December 27, 2004 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

THE MOST FREQUENT CRITICISM OF President Bush's Middle East policy is that he has been too hands-off. Unless America takes the lead, so the argument goes, the "peace process" will languish. In other words, U.S. activism is the key to progress.

A Democratic Palestine

November 22, 2004 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

WITH FIDEL CASTRO now sporting double-breasted suits, the uniform-clad Yasser Arafat could rightly claim to be "the world's last revolutionary." In this regard, as in so many others, Arafat has no heir. None of the contenders to "succeed" him--if the verb is appropriate to the situation--wears a…

How to Win Friends and Influence Arabs

August 18, 2003 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

LIKE A SPORTS TEAM after a dismal season, the State Department is going through a "rebuilding process" to figure out how to win Arab and Muslim friends. As depressing statistics about anti-Americanism continue to mount, especially in the Middle East, Foggy Bottom recently announced the formation of…

The Prime Ministers Nobody Knows

March 17, 2003 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

Editor's Note: President Bush said Friday that the new Palestinian prime minister must have "real authority," which means the power to conduct negotiations on a peace settlement with Israel. Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian Authority leader, wants to retain the job of handling foreign affairs. Last…

The Other Twin Towers

October 8, 2001 · Robert Satloff, Magazine

THEY ARE THE TALLEST towers in town, a pair of them in the hub of the city’s financial district. And thanks to some good intelligence and smart police work, which nabbed the terrorists before they completed their mission, the buildings are still standing today. In this real-life story the city is…