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MUST-READS

  • U.S.-Iran Relationship
    Why Iran views Islamic State fight through a conspiracy lens

    Iran’s top leadership blames the US, CIA, Israel, and America's Sunni allies such as Saudi Arabia for “creating” the IS as a tool to undermine Iran. It's a way to ensure a permanent US troop presence in the Middle East and to create chronic regional tensions that benefit Israel, according to Iran.

  • Iran Negotiations
    Iran acts to comply with interim nuclear deal with powers: IAEA

    Iran is taking further action to comply with an interim nuclear agreement with six world powers, a monthly U.N. atomic agency report showed, a finding the West may see as positive ahead of a November deadline for clinching a long-term deal. The report by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), seen by Reuters, made clear that Iran is meeting its commitments under the temporary deal, as it and major powers seek to negotiate a final settlement of a decade-old nuclear dispute.

  • Riyadh Metro
    Metro project to bring Riyadh on par with world’s great cities

    Work on the project is under way. It includes 756 metro cars, 85 stations, 6 metro lines and 176-km. network. It will also include 3,853 bus stops and stations, 24 bus routes, 1,150 km network and 956 buses. Three foreign groups have been awarded contracts to build the project.

  • Syria
    In the Syria We Don’t Know

    ISIS came along to supersede the FSA, as the FSA had replaced the protesters. ISIS was more combative, more ruthless, better financed, and more effective, using mobility across the desert in Syria and Iraq to launch surprise attacks. It used suicide teams in bomb-laden trucks to open the way into regime strongholds that its rebel adversaries had merely besieged. Moreover, it has achieved the one objective that eluded the FSA: it brought American airpower into the war, but not in the way the FSA wanted. Instead, the Syria war has produced an opposition to Assad so repellent and so antagonistic to Western allies in the region that when the air intervention came, it arrived in the guise of the regime’s ally in all but name.

  • Saudi Survey
    High cost of living plaguing Saudi youth: Poll

    Nearly 60 percent of young Saudis ranked the high cost of living as one of their top three issues. Regional disparities are quite apparent: respondents from the east and the south were more likely to cite this as a top concern than were those from the center. In the focus groups, many young Saudis expressed fear that the high cost of living would limit their ability to marry and have children.

  • Iran Negotiations
    Reading Between the Red Lines: An Anatomy of Iran’s Eleventh-Hour Nuclear Negotiating Strategy

    After yet another round of negotiations on the Iranian nuclear issue this week in Vienna, Tehran is simultaneously reinforcing its red lines while raising expectations that a final agreement remains within reach. While these might sound like mixed messages, in fact they are part of a sophisticated, multi-prong strategy aimed at pressuring Washington and its negotiating partners to accede to Tehran’s stipulations for a deal.

  • Global Data Energy
    Saudi Assets Lead World’s Upstream Developments for Recoverable Oil Reserves, says GlobalData

    The Khurais and Manifa projects in Saudi Arabia have the most recoverable reserves among the world’s top 100 upstream developments, with approximately 19.4 billion barrels of oil equivalent (boe) and 13.7 billion boe, respectively, according to research and consulting firm GlobalData.

  • Saudi Shi'a
    Protests break out after a Shia cleric is sentenced to death

    A powerful orator, 54-year-old Sheikh Nimr emerged as a leader of protests that broke out in 2011 in response to the violent suppression of the pro-democracy movement in neighbouring Bahrain. The island kingdom, whose predominantly Shia population is ruled by a Sunni dynasty, is linked to the Eastern Province by a causeway. In sermons Mr Nimr did not only denounce the Bahraini clampdown, which was bolstered by troops from Saudi Arabia and other Sunni Gulf allies. He also demanded greater rights for Saudi Arabia’s own disenfranchised Shias, who have long complained of discrimination in government jobs and education, as well as of being demonised by official media. The first Shia minister in Saudi history was only appointed in June this year.

  • Global Travel
    Opinion: Traveling While Arab

    Despite the amicable way I am treated by people in the book world, in airports I am just another Arab, a potential terrorist.

  • Iran Negotiations
    U.S. says no talk now about extending Iran nuclear negotiations

    "We don’t know if we’ll be able to get to an agreement, we very well may not,” the official said, declining to be named.