Iran had prepared for the worst as President Ebrahim Raisi took to the podium to deliver his United Nations General Assembly address September 19. The General Assembly coincided with the anniversary of Mahsa Amini’s tragic killing in the custody of the morality police, and the regime feared renewed protests to commemorate the occasion. There were indeed a few protests, but they largely occurred outside of Iran, which Raisi attributed to “foreign machinations.” Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps mouthpiece Sobh-e Sadeq delivered a similar analysis and triumphantly claimed the lack of public protests in Iran marked “the end of an illusion.” However, all cannot be well if foreign governments, as Raisi and the IRGC claim, can so easily mobilize protests against the regime. The source of the IRGC’s expressed pleasure – not pro-regime rallies but rather the absence of widespread anti-regime protests in Iran – also indicates the regime’s awareness of its unpopularity.
For Oman, the transition to cleaner energy sources is both an imperative and a practical economic path to a more sustainable future.
A recently signed security- and economy-focused pact marks the latest development in the United States’ close, long-standing partnership with Bahrain.
A substantial drawdown on global oil stocks is forecast for the fourth quarter amid record oil demand, accelerating the rise in oil prices to the $100 per barrel threshold.
Through its careful examination of the forces shaping the evolution of Gulf societies and the new generation of emerging leaders, AGSIW facilitates a richer understanding of the role the countries in this key geostrategic region can be expected to play in the 21st century.