South Asia Security Monitor: No. 212
Bhutanese hit the polls;
Jemaah Islamiyah's dependence on bin Laden
Bhutanese hit the polls;
Jemaah Islamiyah's dependence on bin Laden
Al Qaeda's Resurgence in Yemen;
Syria's Kurds on the edge;
A new nuclear client for Moscow?;
The Battle for Basra;
A constitutional showdown in Turkey
Solidarity, of sorts, in Sochi;
Racist attacks on the rise
What a difference eight months makes. Last September, General David Petraeus was essentially branded a liar for reporting to Congress that the situation in Iraq was improving markedly, that the so-called “surge” strategy was achieving its intended aims. Today, the general returns with more good news: violence in the country down 75 percent; Sunni sheiks cooperating with the government and Coalition (the “Anbar awakening”); and al-Qaeda in Iraq severely weakened and on the run. Unfortunately, General Petraeus will no doubt have to contend with a barrage of questions about the recent weeks’ fighting in Basra and Baghdad.
A breakthrough in Bucharest...;
...and stalemate in Sochi;
Missile defense, Iranian style;
Palestinian rockets proliferate...;
...as Israel rethinks short-range defense