Home / OPINION / Analysis (page 179)

Analysis

Russia and Central Asian countries in the aftermath of the Taliban victory

Giancarlo Elia Valori While the States concerned are paying attention to the situation in Afghanistan, they are also constantly adjusting their policies towards this country. A new round of “games” on the Afghan issue has just begun. The withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan in 1989 was not …

Read More »

Commemorate 9/11 By Designating Pakistan’s Intel Chief as a Terrorist

It is time the U.S. intelligence community sever all ties and instead focus its intelligence assets on the neutralization of the ISI and its leadership as a precondition to Pakistan’s ability to re-emerge as the normal state that its founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah imagined. In the wake of …

Read More »

The Navy’s Final Zumwalt-Class Stealth Destroyer Is Set to Deploy

The trails, which include at-sea and in-port demonstrations, are intended to allow shipbuilders the opportunity to assess the ship’s technologies, weapons, and technological systems as a key step toward moving toward war. The third and final U.S. Navy stealthy Zumwalt-class destroyer is surging toward ultimate deployment as the …

Read More »

Twenty Years After: How Terrorism and the World have Changed Since 9/11

George Bebee We face a much different world, and a changing terrorist challenge, in 2021. How should the United States deal with terrorism in the aftermath of its military withdrawal from Afghanistan?     The list of things that have changed after terrorists toppled the twin towers twenty …

Read More »

Morocco’s Elections Prove Democracy Can Work with Islam

Ahmad Charabi The Taliban’s seizure of Kabul and appointment of a cabinet of bearded extremists have given many of America’s talking heads the notion that democracy just can’t work in a Muslim country. They couldn’t be more wrong. The Taliban’s seizure of Kabul and appointment of a cabinet of bearded …

Read More »

Increasing Frequency of Cyclones and Flooding Portends Worse Problems

Arshad Khan Sixteen years ago on August 29th, hurricane Katrina struck the Louisiana coast causing widespread damage that was estimated at $125 billion.  This year, by a remarkable coincidence, hurricane Ida hit on the same date, again August 29th.  The weather service  holds the end of August though …

Read More »

Concerns over rapidly changing geopolitic

Zamir Awan Ben Wallace, Britain’s defense secretary, suggested the US could no longer be considered a superpower in an interview where he also contrasted his department’s handling of the Afghanistan crisis with that of the embattled Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Office. The pointed comments – coming at a …

Read More »

Power Vacuum in Afghanistan: A By-product of An Incompetent Geopolitical Contract

Paul Verma I still recall the evening of December 18, 2011, when I read the news of the last U.S. troops being pulled out of Iraq, that ended an eight-year-long military involvement in the region. Somehow the news instantly gave me an uneasy feeling knowing that a catastrophic …

Read More »

Bin Laden’s legacy probably surpasses his wildest dreams

James Dorsey At the very outset of the 21st century, Osama bin Laden wittingly or unwittingly positioned himself with the 9/11 attacks as one of its most important figures. The attacks initially served to undermine multi-cultural policies in relatively ethnically and religiously homogeneous European societies, which struggled to …

Read More »