Is There a Political Solution to the Afghan Conflict?
MEI Podcast 32
Is There a Political Solution to the Afghan Conflict?
Amb. Omar Samad, Shamila Chaudhary, Arif Rafiq, Marvin Weinbaum
MEI Podcast 32
Is There a Political Solution to the Afghan Conflict?
Amb. Omar Samad, Shamila Chaudhary, Arif Rafiq, Marvin Weinbaum
MEI Podcast 32
Is There a Political Solution to the Afghan Conflict?
Amb. Omar Samad, Shamila Chaudhary, Arif Rafiq, Marvin Weinbaum
MEI Podcast 32
Is There a Political Solution to the Afghan Conflict?
Amb. Omar Samad, Shamila Chaudhary, Arif Rafiq, Marvin Weinbaum
MEI Podcast 32
Is There a Political Solution to the Afghan Conflict?
Amb. Omar Samad, Shamila Chaudhary, Arif Rafiq, Marvin Weinbaum
The “new and improved” tactics of “divide and conquer” are operational both at the vertical and horizontal layers of the government and society in Afghanistan.
The 21st century has been called the “Century of the City,” as half of the world’s population lives in urban areas.[1] Virtually all of the projected global population growth will be in cities of the developing world, and most of it will be concentrated in informal settlements.
Recent media coverage of the Afghan war questions whether we’ve made meaningful progress towards security and an effective Government in that country. Or were the past ten years a lost decade for the Afghans and Coalition partners? This ten-year milestone is a good point in time to pause, check Afghanistan’s progress, and assess where it appears to be headed. With the assistance of over 40 nations, Afghanistan developed its infrastructure and has taken major steps towards self sufficiency.
Originally posted December 2009
We are regularly bombarded by news reports and political analysis that reflect certain underlying assumptions about Afghanistan. These assumptions range from claims that Afghanistan was always a backward state ruled by warlords, to assertions that the country was never really a nation at all, and proclamations that Afghanistan is unfit for Western-style democracy and that it is dangerously naïve to think otherwise.
Since the overthrow of King Mohammad Zahir Shah in 1973, Afghanistan has been plagued by war — either war waged among ideologues (Marxists v. nationalists) or war marked by foreign invasion and occupation. The Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, which began in 1979, lasted a full decade.
Police Reform in Pakistan
Hassan Abbas, Aitzaz Ahsan, Arif Alikhan, Wendy Chamberlin
Police Reform in Pakistan
Hassan Abbas, Aitzaz Ahsan, Arif Alikhan, Wendy Chamberlin
Police Reform in Pakistan
Hassan Abbas, Aitzaz Ahsan, Arif Alikhan, Wendy Chamberlin
Police Reform in Pakistan
Hassan Abbas, Aitzaz Ahsan, Arif Alikhan, Wendy Chamberlin
Police Reform in Pakistan
Hassan Abbas, Aitzaz Ahsan, Arif Alikhan, Wendy Chamberlin