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SMU Tower Center, Middle East Lecture: The Aftermath of 10/7 In-Person

The SMU Tower Center would like to invite you to a Middle East Lecture: The Aftermath of 10/7, featuring Dr. Brian Katulis, Senior Fellow at the Middle East Institute.

 

Date: Tuesday, October 21st, 2025

Time: 12:00 – 1:30 p.m.​

12:00 – 12:30 p.m. Registration and lunch

12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Event

 

Location: HT Chamber, Ground Floor, Hughes-Trigg Student Center, 3140 Dyer St., Dallas, TX 75205​

Parking: Binkley Garage, 3105 Binkley Ave., Dallas, TX 75205

 

Registration is required and the seats are first come, first served. Please click below for registration.

 

Nine months into the second Trump administration, the Middle East has been a prominent part of U.S. foreign policy, including President Trump’s Gulf trip in May; a major policy shift to lift sanctions on Syria and meet with Syria’s de facto leader, Ahmed Al-Sharaa; U.S. military strikes against Iran’s nuclear sites along with U.S. support for a 12-day Israeli military campaign targeting Iran’s nuclear program, military leadership, and infrastructure; and diplomacy in the region led by prominent Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Tom Barrack. The impact of these significant actions by the United States in the Middle East remains mixed. Close U.S. partners in the Middle East, particularly the countries Trump visited in May, have seen new opportunities to deepen strategic, economic, energy, technological, and military ties with the United States. However, the impact of Trump’s tariffs and broader trade war may ultimately undercut these openings to strengthen bilateral relations and incentivize regional partners to diversify their global economic relationships. Iran, Israel-Palestine, and the Houthis in Yemen remain the three major unresolved variables in the Middle East equation. While Iran’s nuclear and military infrastructure suffered considerable damage, it is unclear if these actions will produce a lasting resolution to concerns about Iran’s nuclear program and destabilizing actions. The weakest link in U.S. policy in the Middle East remains the Israel-Palestinian front as the war between Israel and Hamas continues. In contrast, Syria and Lebanon present key opportunities for U.S. policy and engagement, but this will require sustained U.S. diplomatic engagement over the months and years ahead. This presentation will assess whether Trump 2.0’s overall foreign policy approach—characterized by transactional diplomacy, selective military engagement, and attempts to use America’s economic power to gain global leverage—is likely to produce a more durable and sustainable security environment in the Middle East, amid a rapidly evolving regional landscape.

 

Featuring:

 

Brian Katulis, Senior Fellow Middle East Institute

Brian Katulis is a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, specializing in US foreign policy and national security. He hosts the MEI podcast series Taking the Edge Off the Middle East and authors the column "Making Sense: A Weekly Take on US Foreign Policy." Katulis draws on decades of experience living and working in the Middle East, where he has forged relationships of trust and confidence across the region with top leaders in government, the private sector, media, national security, and thought leaders from a wide variety of international organizations.   As a foreign policy strategist and senior fellow, Katulis has produced influential studies that have shaped key regional policy debates and provided expert testimony to congressional committees on his findings. Prior to MEI, he was a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress (CAP), where he built the center’s Middle East program. His career also includes significant experience at the National Security Council, the US Department of State, and the US Department of Defense. Katulis co-authored The Prosperity Agenda (2008) with Nancy Soderberg, a book that examines how America’s economic advantages can be used to positively shape global dynamics. He is also frequently quoted in leading news publications and media outlets including The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Public Radio, and PBS Newshour. He holds a Master in Public Affairs from Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs and a BA in History and Arab and Islamic Studies from Villanova University. He was a Fulbright Scholar in Amman, Jordan from 1994-1995, where he conducted a research project on the peace process between Israel and Jordan.

 

Moderator:

Sabri Ates, Professor of History and the ad-interim Chair of the William P. Clements Department of History at SMU’s Dedman College; and Senior Fellow at the Tower Center

Dr. Sabri Ates is a Professor of History and the ad-interim Chair of the William P. Clements Department of History at SMU’s Dedman College, as well as a Senior Fellow at the Tower Center. He earned his Ph.D. from New York University and specializes in Ottoman-Iranian relations, Kurdish history, the late Ottoman Empire, sectarianism in the Middle East, and borderlands. Currently he is working on a book on the Emergence of Kurdish Nationalism.

 

Note: This event has a bag and sign policy for access the room. Only small purses or clutches are allowed; large bags, banners, or signs are not permitted inside the auditorium and the registration area.

The Tower Center is not responsible for unattended items.

 

Any person who requires a reasonable accommodation on the basis of a disability in order to participate in this program should contact the SMU Tower Center at tower@smu.edu in advance at least 4 days prior to the event to arrange for the accommodation.

 

SMU Tower Center | http://www.smu.edu/TowerCenter

Southern Methodist University (SMU)

3300 University Boulevard, Dallas, TX 75275-0117

214-768-3954  tower@smu.edu

Date:
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Time:
12:00pm - 1:30pm
Time Zone:
Central Time - US & Canada (change)
Registration has closed.

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