Why the Trump Administration’s Central Asia Strategy Improves Over Its Predecessors
U.S. Central Asia policy has room to improve, but the Trump administration is steering things on the right track.
U.S. Central Asia policy has room to improve, but the Trump administration is steering things on the right track.
This week, the city of Prague will commemorate the fifth anniversary of the slaying of Russia’s freedom-promoting opposition leader, Boris Nemtsov, by renaming for him the square where Russia’s embassy is located.
The most important takeaway from the killing of Qassem Suleimani doesn’t just have to do with Iran.
What if you held a national election and no one turned out? That’s the situation currently confronting Iranian officials, who are grappling with the aftermath of a truly disastrous outcome in last week’s parliamentary elections.
Iran’s clerical army could decide that an internal transition is the best answer, and move to remove (or at least subordinate) the country’s current clerical elite. Such a step, after all, would allow the IRGC to preserve its current, extensive grip on national power while simultaneously working to alleviate economic pressure from the U.S. and reintegrate into the international community.