The Iraq Crisis, ISIS and the region
PAST
EVENT
EVENT
Jul 03, 2014
00:00 - 00:00
Grown out of al-Qaeda in Iraq in April 2013, the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) is the main jihadist groups fighting government forces in Syria. Active in Iraq, present in a number of towns near the Turkish border and with claims over the whole Levant, ISIS’s rise to power was helped by several exogenous factors, from the international community’s inaction toward the crisis in Syria – which allowed ISIS to fill the vacuum of power left by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad – to Iraq’s prolonged state of internal disarray. The Policy Dialogue looked at developments in Iraq, analysed the role of ISIS and Jihadist groups in region, the impact on the broad region and the role of external actors including Turkey and Saudi Arabia.
The European Politics and Institutions Programme covers the EU’s institutional architecture, governance and policymaking to ensure that it can move forward and respond to the challenges of the 21st century democratically and effectively. It also monitors and analyses political developments at the EU level and in the member states, discussing the key questions of how to involve European citizens in the discussions over the Union’s future and how to win their support for European integration. The Programme has a special focus on enlargement policy towards the Western Balkans, questions of EU institutional reform and illiberal trends in European democracies.
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