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Connecting Beijing’s global infrastructure: The PEACE Cable in the Middle East and North Africa
 Photo by AMELIE HERENSTEIN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Connecting Beijing’s global infrastructure: The PEACE Cable in the Middle East and North Africa

    One of the most ambitious elements of China’s Digital Silk Road is the Pakistan & East Africa Connecting Europe (PEACE) fiber-optic cable. China has long expressed its ambition to connect the greater Middle East, Africa, and Europe with Chinese fiber optics in order to expand its presence in the region, and Beijing now boasts strategic infrastructure assets in geopolitical hotspots, such as the Pakistani port of Gwadar.

    March 7, 2022

    Taliban rule of Afghanistan at six months
  • Podcast
  • Taliban rule of Afghanistan at six months

    Marvin Weinbaum and Sayed Madadi discuss Afghanistan’s worsening economic and humanitarian crises six months after the Taliban reclaimed control of the country.

    February 25, 2022

    The Pakistani Taliban’s radical rebranding: Is there more than meets the eye?
    Security officials and relatives attend a funeral ceremony of a slain policeman, who was killed in an attack claimed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), in the border town of Chaman on January 28, 2022. (Photo by Abdul BASIT / AFP) (Photo by ABDUL BASIT/AFP via Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • The Pakistani Taliban’s radical rebranding: Is there more than meets the eye?

    In a statement released on Feb. 12, the Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) distanced itself from international terrorism, declaring that its violence was singularly focused on Pakistan. While the TTP’s recent comments on America are unprecedented, they do fit into its broader rebranding effort under the leadership of Noor Wali Mehsud, who took over the group in 2018.

    February 24, 2022

    The dangers of empowering the Taliban
    Photo by HOSHANG HASHIMI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The dangers of empowering the Taliban

    For years, the world tried to soften the Taliban’s extremist ideology by exposing them to modernity. As an insurgency they learned diplomacy and negotiation tactics, but their medieval thinking remained just as rigid. Now that the Taliban rule over Afghanistan, the international community continues to appease them, assuming it can convince them to form an inclusive government and ease their regressive policies while alleviating the country’s worsening humanitarian disaster. That is a naïve assumption that overlooks the root causes of the current crisis. Not only will the international community not get what it wants, but it also risks creating a much greater crisis: a Taliban theocracy that institutionalizes its repressive rule at a steep human and economic cost.

    February 14, 2022

    The Taliban’s religious roadmap for Afghanistan
    Photo by MOHD RASFAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Taliban’s religious roadmap for Afghanistan

    After a grueling 20-year campaign, America concluded its war in Afghanistan where it started: with the Taliban in charge. But this isn’t your father’s Taliban. In recognition of their need for a firmer ideological base and their desire to establish a purely Islamic system, the Taliban rulers are gradually putting together the framework for their new ideological state. They are enacting three closely intertwined ideological initiatives in order to solidify their rule: fleshing out a state religious ideology, burnishing their “originalist” religious credentials, and channeling Afghan nationalism into religious nationalism. These ongoing efforts, which revolve around the Taliban’s Islamism, provide a preview of how the new rulers intend to interact with temporal political realities by provoking religious reform in order to rule Afghanistan.

    Afghanistan’s economy: Collapse and chaos
    Photo by Scott Peterson/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Afghanistan’s economy: Collapse and chaos

    On Jan. 13, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed alarm that millions of Afghans are on the “verge of death” thanks to a lethal brew of “freezing temperatures and frozen assets.” This was no idle warning. Notwithstanding the decline in fighting following the Taliban’s victory in August 2021, Afghanistan’s economy is in a deepening spiral of impoverishment and destitution.

    January 21, 2022

    India’s search for a new role in Afghanistan
    Photo by Arvind Yadav/Hindustan Times via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • India’s search for a new role in Afghanistan

    As the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan grows increasingly dire, Pakistan has informed India that it will allow the transportation of wheat and life-saving medicines from India to Afghanistan through its territory, on the condition that only Afghan trucks are used to carry it. The Taliban regime has praised Pakistan for the move, but will it arrest the decline in India’s fortunes in Afghanistan?

    December 8, 2021