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    Explore "middle_east_politics" with insightful episodes like "Israel seized control of the Rafah border crossing. The impact could be devastating", "War in Israel and Palestine: could it spread?", "War in Israel Escalates; Biden Boosting Aid", "The Challenges for a Saudi-Israeli Peace Deal" and "The Gulf narrows: Iran-Saudi relations" from podcasts like ""Consider This from NPR", "The New Statesman Podcast", "Bloomberg Daybreak: US Edition", "Consider This from NPR" and "Economist Podcasts"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Israel seized control of the Rafah border crossing. The impact could be devastating

    Israel seized control of the Rafah border crossing. The impact could be devastating
    The Biden administration has put a hold on an arms shipment to Israel. A senior administration official speaking on the condition of anonymity told NPR it was due to concerns the bombs could be used in Rafah.

    Rafah is the site of Israel's latest campaign in its war against Hamas. It's also home to some 1.3 million Palestinians. More than half of those people have fled fighting in other parts of Gaza.

    On Monday night, Israeli tanks rolled into Rafah taking control of the Palestinian side of the border crossing with Egypt.

    The seizure of the border crossing cuts a key supply line for humanitarian aid.

    Israel says its incursion in Rafah is a "precise counterterrorism operation." But possible further military action along with the closed border crossing could exacerbate a humanitarian catastrophe.

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    War in Israel and Palestine: could it spread?

    War in Israel and Palestine: could it spread?

    As Israel prepares a ground attack on Gaza, Katie Stallard is joined by Alona Ferber and Professor Lina Khatib to explore the wider geo-political situation in the Middle East - including mounting violence on Israel's west bank and the looming shadow of Hezbollah in Iran.


    Follow the New Statesman's reporting and analysis of the crisis in Israel and Gaza at www.NewStatesman.com.


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    The Challenges for a Saudi-Israeli Peace Deal

    The Challenges for a Saudi-Israeli Peace Deal
    For the past few months, President Biden's top foreign policy advisors have been working as intermediaries between Saudi Arabia and Israel. Eventually they want to get the two countries to agree on a deal to finally establish formal diplomatic relations.

    It would be a breakthrough for Israel to get that recognition, after decades of Arab hostility stemming from the Israeli Palestinian conflict. Saudi Arabia is home to two of Islam's holiest sites, and it's an oil giant in the region.

    But it seems like an almost impossible three-way agreement. So, what's standing in the way?

    NPR's Daniel Estrin, who covers Israel, speaks with Felicia Schwartz from the Financial Times, Bader Al Saif, an assistant professor of history at the University of Kuwait, and fellow NPR correspondent Aya Batrawy, who covers Saudi Arabia, to understand what challenges remain for the two countries to normalize relations.

    In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.

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    The Gulf narrows: Iran-Saudi relations

    The Gulf narrows: Iran-Saudi relations

    The two regional rivals have negotiated a deal, ending a seven-year lapse in diplomatic ties. Elsewhere, though, Iran remains aggressive. We ask what to make of its apparent inconsistency. Geothermal is a viable renewable source. What would it take for America to tap in? And, the multibillion-dollar Chinese industry being hit by a theory of covid-19’s origins


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    A Dinner and a Deal

    A Dinner and a Deal

    In March 2018, Mark Landler — then a White House correspondent at The New York Times — attended a dinner party hosted by the United Arab Emirates’ ambassador, Yousef al-Otaiba, at a Washington restaurant. There he witnessed a chance encounter between the ambassador and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel — one the ambassador asked to keep private. Two years after that delicate conversation, Israel and the United Arab Emirates have agreed to normalize diplomatic and trade relations. Today, we speak to Mr. Landler about the Trump administration’s role in the agreement, what normalization means for Palestinians and what it says about the Middle East’s political climate. Guest: Mark Landler, London bureau chief at The New York Times.

    For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily

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