Yuval Ben-David

“As the broader Middle East peace process has stagnated, one of the quietest yet most tragic casualties has been the collapse of the political imagination. Yet, amid the devastation and dehumanization deepened in the post–October 7 reality, there remains an elusive opportunity to think radically differently about regional order and coexistence. The collapse of the Assad regime marks a turning point—not just for Syria’s people, but as part of a broader weakening of the so-called “axis of resistance.” Such a shift could open space for a more pragmatic and less ideologically rigid regional balance. In this context, the Abraham Accords, though imperfect, demonstrate the stabilizing potential of shared interests and bottom-up normalization. Transnational challenges such as climate change cut across borders and identities, demanding cooperation even among longtime adversaries. Water scarcity, desertification, and shared environmental stressors may become unexpected drivers of dialogue where politics have failed. Syria-Israel affairs embody the tension between despair and renewal, fatalism and possibility - the potential that amid collapse and polarization, new forms of regional interdependence might emerge.”

Yuval Ben-David is an Affiliate Fellow at Tukhum Institute for Syria–Israel Affairs. and he is the Chief Strategy Officer at the Yale International Leadership Center, covering external relations, new initiatives and special projects at an “action tank” addressing some of the twenty-first century’s most complex challenges. A graduate of Yale and Oxford. Yuval started his career as a journalist specializing in the Middle East, and he has worked on climate security peacebuilding with various UN agencies, and International Organizations.