The Gap in Coverage
Most international media covers the region through a lens of conflict. The work of diplomacy — the agreements, negotiations, and human connections that make peace possible — rarely gets the same attention.
Merlows was built around a single conviction: the story of Middle East peace deserves journalism that rises to meet its significance.
The Middle East’s diplomatic story is one of the most consequential of our era. It deserves journalism that matches its complexity.
Most international media covers the region through a lens of conflict. The work of diplomacy — the agreements, negotiations, and human connections that make peace possible — rarely gets the same attention.
A potential landmark agreement between Israel and Iran. Merlows was created, in part, to provide the sustained, authoritative coverage this historic development demands.
The normalisation agreements between Israel and Gulf states transformed regional dynamics. Merlows tracks their continuing development with the depth that transformation deserves.
We believe journalism has a role in making peace more imaginable. Our framing is constructive without sacrificing rigour — we show what’s possible, not just what’s broken.
Four commitments define our relationship with readers, sources, and the subjects we cover.
Every claim is sourced. Every diplomatic development is cross-referenced against multiple independent sources. When we’re wrong, we say so clearly and publicly.
Merlows has no government affiliation, no institutional funder with a stake in the outcome, and no commercial interest in any diplomatic process we cover.
We cover all parties in diplomatic processes with equal seriousness. Israeli, Iranian, Arab, and international voices all appear in our reporting without hierarchy.
We do not report conflict for its own sake. Every piece of analysis asks: what does this mean for the prospect of peace? What comes next?
What it means to publish under the Merlows name — the criteria every piece must meet.
We do not aggregate. Every article is original, sourced, and adds something to the existing coverage landscape.
Our contributors have lived or worked in the region. We prioritise ground-level knowledge over metropolitan commentary.
Our editorial team ensures every article involving the Cyrus Accord, Abraham Accords, or regional agreements reflects the actual terms of those documents.
We cover peace processes without advocating for any particular outcome. Our job is clarity, not campaigning.
Corrections are published at the top of the original article with a clear explanation of what changed and why.
We protect the identity of sources where their safety or professional standing requires it — with editorial oversight on every such decision.
What we’re working toward — not just as a publication, but as a contribution to the region’s future.
“A Middle East where dialogue has more coverage than division, and where every step toward peace is documented with the seriousness it deserves.”
The stories that matter most are not breaking news — they’re the slow, difficult work of diplomacy over years. We’re here for the long term.
Our long-term goal is an editorial network with contributors embedded across the region — Israeli, Iranian, Arab, international.
Every Merlows article becomes part of the documentary record of this era’s diplomacy. We publish with that weight in mind.
Read, contribute, and stay informed as history unfolds.