Missile Defense Briefing Report: No. 280
A new end to New START;
Seoul eyes longer range strikes;
Romania's quest for a missile defense role;
A critical hurdle for India's missile shield;
Taiwan's failed attempt at deterrence
A new end to New START;
Seoul eyes longer range strikes;
Romania's quest for a missile defense role;
A critical hurdle for India's missile shield;
Taiwan's failed attempt at deterrence
China rolls out J-20 stealth fighter;
China grapples with lead poisoning cases
Russian "
ultra-nationalism"
- a double-edged sword;
The fix is in for Khodorkovsky
Practically overnight, it seems, the "Jasmine Revolution" that has swept over Tunisia has reshuffled the geopolitical deck in the greater Middle East.
Over the span of less than three weeks, protests over unemployment and political restrictions in the sleepy North African nation became a nationwide phenomenon, challenging the country's long-serving president, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, and his ruling Constitutional Democratic Rally. In the face of this widespread dissatisfaction, Ben Ali blinked, making a number of major political concessions—among them, announcing he would step down as president once his term was up in 2014, and putting curbs on the national military's use of force in dealing with the protests (thereby effectively giving the opposition free reign of the streets). Rather than mollify his opponents, however, these conciliatory measures only served to embolden them, and less than 24 hours later Ben Ali had fled the country for the relative safety of Saudi Arabia. Since then, political turmoil has reigned, as remaining politicians have attempted to cobble together a durable interim government in the face of ongoing public discontent.
In the process, Tunisia's popular uprising has become a model of sorts. The catalyst for Tunisia's turmoil—the self-immolation of an unemployed 28-year-old vegetable seller—already has spurred copycats throughout the region (specifically, in Egypt, Mauritania and Algeria). And in many quarters, there is new hope of movement toward true democracy in the historically-stagnant Middle East. "Tunisia is now the model to follow for all Arabs," one hopeful Algerian has told Reuters. "The time for dictators and dictatorships is over."
Ethnic riots... and a heavy-handed response;
Russia's nuclear fuel bank comes online