war_on_terror <strong>THE BACKWARD WAR ON TERROR STRATEGY</strong> By egoist.blogspot.com Published On :: 2006-10-23T01:59:00Z I look forward to hear reports from the conference (The Jihad Against the West: The Real Threat and the Right Response) at Ford Hall Forum in Boston. Did you listen to Dr. Yaron Brook's lecture, Democracy vs. Victory: Why the "Forward Strategy of Freedom" Had to Fail?Related: My post, FORWARD STRATEGY OF FREEDOM. Full Article
war_on_terror War on Terror: 10 years on By www.globalissues.org Published On :: Sat, 24 Sep 2011 14:53:00 GMT A quick look back over the decade since the 9-11 attacks finds that the neo-conservatives have achieved the opposite of what they set out to do: rather than winning a war on terror and expanding their power even further, they have over-stretched their own nation, militarily and economically. The Bush Administration preferred to concentrate on Iraq rather than Bin Laden and the trillions of dollars spent on this (directly and indirectly) has contributed to the recent economic problems the country now faces. All terribly costly given there were opportunities to get Bin Laden a lot earlier. Media coverage and public attitudes have also shifted in the past decade, now almost reflecting partisan lines. Rights groups around the world have long voiced concerns that the war on terror is also an excuse for governments to wage a war on freedoms. Bin Laden may be dead but are the terrorists winning? Read full article: War on Terror Full Article Geopolitics
war_on_terror 2006 CUSE Annual Conference: The EU, Russia and the War on Terror By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 01 May 2006 00:00:00 -0400 Event Information Falk AuditoriumThe Brookings Institution1775 Massachusetts Ave., NWWashington, DC Register for the Event Welcome and Introduction: Philip H. Gordon , Director, Center on the United States and Europe Is the European Union Failing? Politics and Policy after the Referendums Philip H. Gordon , Director, Center on the United States and Europe Panelists:Gerard Baker, The Times (London)Joschka Fischer, Member of Bundestag and former German Foreign MinisterNoëlle Lenoir, President of the European Institute of HEC, former French Minister for European AffairsAndrew Moravcsik, Princeton University/Brookings Is Russia Lost? The Future of Russian Democracy and Relations with the WestFiona Hill, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution Panelists:Daniel Fried, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European AffairsAnatol Lieven, New America FoundationStrobe Talbott, President, The Brookings InstitutionDmitri Trenin, Carnegie Moscow Center Is America above the Law? A U.S.-Europe Dialogue about the War on TerrorJeremy Shapiro, Director of Research, Center on the United States and Europe Panelists:Joschka Fischer, Member of Bundestag and former German Foreign MinisterTom Malinowski, Human Rights WatchPauline Neville-Jones, Chair, British Conservative Party National and International Security GroupVictoria Toensing, former U.S. Justice Department OfficialRuth Wedgwood, Johns Hopkins-SAIS Full Article
war_on_terror Women and the war on terror: An insider account By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 22 Jul 2019 20:16:12 +0000 I am often asked what it is like to work for the Central Intelligence Agency. I spent 30 years there, both as an analyst and an operator abroad. A new book by Nada Bakos—“The Targeter: My Life in the CIA, Hunting Terrorists and Challenging the White House” (with Davin Coburn, published by Little, Brown and… Full Article
war_on_terror Orlando and the war on terror By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Thu, 16 Jun 2016 14:00:00 -0400 The United States needs to bear down on a comprehensive strategy to defeat ISIS globally in the aftermath of the terrible June 12 tragedy in Orlando, Florida. To be sure, no such effort can reliably prevent all such future attacks. But moments like these require that we reassess and reinvigorate our strategy against a serious, global threat to our nation and our allies. Some will say that ISIS overachieved here, or that Omar Mateen was more a deranged individual than an ISIS operative, or that recent battlefield progress by the United States and its partners against ISIS in Iraq and Syria will soon lead to the group’s demise. None of these arguments is compelling as a case for complacency. What Mateen did, even if the bloodiest single shooting spree in U.S. history, is entirely repeatable by well-trained individuals with access to weapons like the AR-15. Mateen was perhaps deranged, but he also was apparently pushed over the edge by the allure of joining a broader ISIS-inspired movement that finds legitimacy in doctrines of hate, and takes purpose from creating mass-casualty events in the name of some perverted interpretation of Islam. It could, and probably will, happen again. Yes, a combination of Iraqi forces, U.S. and coalition airpower, Kurdish fighters, Sunni tribesmen, and Shiite militias has taken back perhaps 40 percent of Iraqi territory and 20 percent of Syrian territory previously held by ISIS. ISIS may have lost up to half its revenue in those two countries as well. But the cities of Raqqa and Mosul remain firmly in ISIS hands. Over the last year or two, moreover, ISIS has deepened its roots from the Sinai Peninsula to Libya, established tentacles from Azerbaijan to Afghanistan and into Southeast Asia, and gained a powerful affiliate in the form of the Boko Haram movement in Nigeria. It may be down, but it is hardly out. [ISIS] may be down, but it is hardly out. Mapping the threat Several crucial aspects of the anti-ISIS campaign are lagging. Country by country, an agenda to address them might be summarized as follows: Iraq. Here, government-led forces are making headway, but the pace is slow, and most worrisome of all, there is little reason to think that Mosul in particular will be well-governed once it is retaken from ISIS. We need to find a way to increase U.S. leverage in Baghdad to create the kinds of “hold” forces that can lead to a stable peace—as much a political problem as a military one. That may require a larger aid and assistance package from the United States—especially relevant given how much Iraq depends on oil revenue and how much oil prices have fallen. Syria. Here, the political strategy does not really hold water. Peace talks are moribund; Bashar Assad is on the march, with Russian help. We need to lower our political goals—confederation, with protection of minority rights, may be a more appropriate standard for success. But regardless, we need to step up our game at helping not only Kurdish forces, but moderate Arab forces too. Quite likely, we will need to relax modestly our vetting standards on whom we help, and increase several-fold the number of Americans involved in the training and equipping efforts. Certain types of retaliatory measures against Syrian government aircraft that bomb declared no-go zones may be appropriate as well. Only by moving towards solving the civil war can we properly target the ISIS menace there. Libya. With the unity government perhaps taking shape, the West now needs to be preparing an intensified aid and training program for a Libyan government force that can gain the strength needed to consolidate control, at least in ISIS-occupied areas in the country’s central coastal regions. This will require perhaps hundreds of Western advisors in the country when the moment is right. Nigeria. With President Muhammadu Buhari making progress against corruption, it is time for an expanded American assistance program that may even, if Nigerians so request, involve deployment of small mentoring teams to the field to help the army in its fight against Boko Haram. Afghanistan. President Obama should not make any further reductions in U.S. troop levels for the rest of his presidency, and should allow U.S. commanders considerable flexibility in how they employ airpower there against the Taliban. The Homefront. ISIS is in fact a three-headed monster—with its core in Iraq and Syria, its various provinces and affiliates (or wilayats) around the broader region, and the global network that binds the pieces together. It is against this global network, both domestically and internationally, that we must double down, for it will be this network that will generate the attacks upon our homelands. Encrypted smart phones have complicated this effort when cells of extremists are actively plotting attacks. But the net effect of technology can still probably help us—if we intensify our pressure on the network through vigilance, rigorous investigations that blend law enforcement and intelligence, and disruptive, timely actions against suspects. New York City, London, and increasingly Paris have done this, but the methods are not yet generalized. This requires aggressive and unequivocal American leadership. It is against this global network, both domestically and internationally, that we must double down. These efforts would be significant. Yet none would be enormous. The overseas components, taken together, would involve no more than several thousand additional U.S. personnel and several billion dollars a year in additional aid of various types to groups that are doing the real fighting and dying in common cause with us. We must strike all three heads of this horrific creature, simultaneously and relentlessly. The United States and its coalition partners have made a modest amount of progress against ISIS, but now is a moment to intensify the effort before the next, possibly much worse, attack occurs. Authors John R. AllenMichael E. O'Hanlon Full Article
war_on_terror Terror assaulter: O.M.W.O.T. (one man war on terror) / [Benjamin Marra] By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 24 Dec 2017 06:18:16 EST Hayden Library - PN6727.M24437 T47 2015 Full Article
war_on_terror Monsters to destroy: understanding the "War on Terror" / Navin A. Bapat By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 29 Mar 2020 07:44:51 EDT Dewey Library - HV6432.B364 2019 Full Article
war_on_terror Suspect communities: anti-Muslim racism and the domestic war on terror / Nicole Nguyen By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:04:30 EDT Dewey Library - HV6432.N555 2019 Full Article
war_on_terror Did the war on terror ignite an opioid epidemic? [electronic resource] / Resul Cesur, Joseph J. Sabia, W. David Bradford By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: Cambridge, Mass. : National Bureau of Economic Research, 2019 Full Article
war_on_terror The 9/11 generation: youth, rights, and solidarity in the war on terror / Sunaina Marr Maira By grammy.mit.edu Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 Rotch Library - HQ799.2.P6 M345 2016 Full Article
war_on_terror In Britain’s war on terror, one teacher shows the way By indianexpress.com Published On :: Sun, 13 Sep 2015 20:51:45 +0000 Full Article DO NOT USE Europe World