China Reform Monitor: No. 915
Questions raised about Chinese-built dams in Burma;
China snubs DPRK on jet fighter request
Questions raised about Chinese-built dams in Burma;
China snubs DPRK on jet fighter request
Moscow strengthens missile shield;
Mapping the Musudan;
Keeping up with the (nuclear) Joneses;
Turkey: the weak link for NATO defenses?;
Rethinking the INF Treaty
A year after the attacks of September 11th, then-Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, in contextualizing the terrorist threat facing the country, made a telling assessment. “Hezbollah may be the A-team of terrorists,” Mr. Armitage told an audience at the United States Institute of Peace in Washington, DC, “and maybe al-Qaida is actually the B-team.” The description was apt, and remains so. With a presence in an estimated forty countries on five different continents, the Lebanese Shi’ite militia represents one of the very few terrorist groups active today that possess a truly global presence and reach.
This footprint extends not only to the greater Middle East and Europe, but to the Western Hemisphere as well. Over the past quarter-century, Hezbollah has devoted considerable energy and resources to establishing an extensive network of operations throughout the Americas. Today, its web of activity in our hemisphere stretches from Canada to Argentina, and encompasses a wide range of illicit activities and criminal enterprises, from drug trafficking to recruitment to fundraising and training.
China, HK crack down on triads ahead of University Games;
In Central Asia ethnic tensions flare between Chinese, locals
JeM making a comeback;
China clears NSG hurdle, will send nuke reactors to Pak;
UN removes Taliban sanctions, but negotiations hit a snag;
Indian gov. under pressure from anti-corruption protesters