Jose Lev Alvarez

Jose Lev Alvarez is an American-Israeli scholar specializing in Middle Eastern security policy. A multilingual veteran of both the IDF Special Forces and the U.S. Army, he holds a B.S. in neuroscience with a minor in Israel Studies from American University, three master’s degrees (international geostrategy, applied economics, and intelligence studies), and a medical degree. He is currently completing a Ph.D. in intelligence and global security in the Washington, D.C. area. In addition to serving as a writing fellow at the Middle East Forum, Lev blogs for The Times of Israel, contributes to the Washington Examiner, and regularly provides geopolitical analysis on Latin American television networks.

Articles by this Author
Turkey’s Presence Is Part of a Deliberate Strategy to Dominate Energy Corridors, Migration Routes, and Maritime Claims
The Islamic Republic Has Cultivated a Criminal Network to Carry Out Terror Attacks That the West Does Nothing to Stop
When Iranian Missiles and Drones Directly Threaten Saudi Territory and Economic Interests, Survival Instincts Prevail
Iran Returns the Favor by Explicitly Carrying Out an Anti-Western ‘Crusade’ from Spanish Soil
The Small Baltic Nation Understands the Battlefield in a Way the European Union Never Will
The Same Iranian Presence That Hides in Trafficking and Money Laundering Is Taking Visible Military Form in the Americas
Turkey Offers Capability Without Western Lectures, Prices Below Top-Tier American or Israeli Systems, and Security Cooperation
The Sánchez Regime Has Made Hostility to Jerusalem Its Policy and Israel Should Impose Consequences
Since the 1980s, Iran’s Influence Networks Have Embedded Tehran Within the Hemisphere’s Political and Informational Terrain
Security Would Be America’s More Effective Leverage to Coerce Spain, Rather than Using Trade
The Claim That the American–Israeli Strikes on Iran Are Illegal Collapses Under Any Basic Reading of International Law
By Positioning Argentina Within a Pro-Israel Alignment, Buenos Aires Redefines Its Posture from Passive to Proactive
Bolivia’s Central Position and Permissive Counterintelligence Conditions Lower the Barriers for External Actors
Parts of the Western Hemisphere Function as a Financial Backend, Logistics Marketplace, and Operational Sphere for Criminal Networks
Leadership Change May Disrupt Tempo, but It Does Not Dismantle Embedded Networks Built over Years