Posted by: zanshin, 2008-10-15 12:21

Story

A mad scramble over Afghanistan

M K Bhadrakumar, 2008-10-15 (Wednesday), Asia Times
An impression is being created that there is a "rift" between the United States and Britain regarding the reconciliation track involving the Taliban. The plain truth is that the US, Britain, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are in this murky game together.

The essence of the game is to make the "war on terror" in Afghanistan more efficient and cost-effective. Surely, it is official American thinking that there has to be some form of reconciliation with the Taliban. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates admitted as much last week. He said, "There has to be ultimately, and I'll underscore ultimately, reconciliation as part of the political outcome to this [war]. That's ultimately the exit strategy for all of us." (Emphasis added)

When you repeat a word thrice in five seconds, it does register. Gates suggested he wasn't hinting at all about an "exit strategy". Indeed, at an informal meeting of the defense ministers of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) last week in Budapest, Hungary, the alliance visualized a long haul in Afghanistan.

Taliban reconciliation
Any reconciliation with the Taliban would essentially be in the nature of picking up the threads from October 2001 when the US invaded Afghanistan and toppled the Taliban regime.

Taliban leader Mullah Omar promised at the 11th hour in those fateful days from his hideout in Kandahar via Pakistani intermediaries - that, yes, he would verifiably sequester his movement from al-Qaeda and ask Osama bin Laden to leave Afghan soil, provided the US acceded to his longstanding request to accord recognition to his regime in Kabul rather than engage it selectively. The US administration ignored the cleric's offer and instead pressed ahead with the plan to launch a "war on terror".

What we may expect in the period ahead is a deal whereby the "good" Taliban profess disengagement from al-Qaeda, which the US and its allies will graciously accept, and, in turn, the "good" Taliban won't insist on the withdrawal of Western forces as a pre-condition. The Saudis will ably lubricate such a deal.

The sheer "unaffordability" of an open-ended war in Afghanistan will influence thinking in Washington if the crisis in the US economy deepens. But we are still some way from that threshold. The war should be "affordable" if the new head of US Central Command, General David Petraeus, can somehow make it more "efficient", which is what he did in Iraq. Presently, American politicians only speak about robustly conducting the war.

They are nowhere near framing the fundamental issue: How central is the Afghan war to the global struggle against terrorism? The answer is crystal clear. Afghanistan has very little to do with the basic national interests of the United States. Political violence in Afghanistan is primarily rooted in local issues, and "warlordism" is an ancient trait. That is to say, the Taliban can be made part of the solution.

Ultimately, the objectives of nation-building and legitimate governance in an environment of overall security that allows economic activities and development can only be realized by accommodating native priorities and interests. Washington has been far too prescriptive, creating a US-style presidential system in Kabul and then controlling it.

But such a regime will never command respect among Afghans. Deploying more NATO troops or creating an Afghan army is not the answer. The international community has prudently chosen not to challenge the legitimacy of the Hamid Karzai regime, but there is a crisis of leadership. Inter-Afghan dialogue is urgently needed. The Afghans must be allowed to regenerate their traditional methods of contestation of power in their cultural context and to negotiate their cohabitation in their tribal context.

Again, the US has been proven wrong in believing that imperialism could trump nationalism. On the contrary, prolonged foreign occupation has triggered a backlash. The war should never have escalated beyond what it ought to have been - a low-intensity fratricidal strife, which has been a recurring feature of Afghan history. In other words, a solution to the conflict has to be primarily inter-Afghan, leading to a broad-based government free of foreign influence, where the international community can be a facilitator and guarantor.

Russia lashes out
But what clouds judgment is the geopolitics of the war. The war provided a context for the establishment of a US military presence in Central Asia; NATO's first-ever "out of area" operation; a turf which overlooks the two South Asian nuclear weapon states of India and Pakistan, Iran and China's restive Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region; a useful toehold on a potential transportation route for Caspian energy bypassing Russia and Iran, etc. The situation around Iran; the US's "Great Central Asia" policy and containment strategy towards Russia; NATO's expansion - these have become added factors. Surely, geopolitical considerations lie embedded even within the current attempt to revive the Saudi mediatory role.

The interplay of these various geopolitical factors has made the war opaque. Major regional powers - Russia, Iran and India - do not see the US or NATO contemplating a pullout from Afghanistan in the foreseeable future. Tehran has been alleging that the US strategy in Afghanistan is essentially to perpetuate its military presence.

As a result, Russian statements regarding the US role in Afghanistan have become highly critical. Moscow seems to have assessed that the US-led war is getting nowhere and blame-game had begun. More important, Russia has began to pinpoint the US's "unilateralism" in Afghanistan.

In a major speech recently regarding European security at the World Policy Conference in Evian, France, President Dmitry Medvedev made a pointed reference, saying, "After the overthrow of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, the United States started a chapter of unilateral actions ..." He was making a point that the "United States' desire to consolidate its global role" is unrealizable in a multipolar world.

For the first time in the seven years of the war, the Russian foreign minister utilized the annual United Nations General Assembly forum to launch a broadside against the US, on September 27. Sergei Lavrov said:

More and more questions are being raised as to what is going on in Afghanistan. First and foremost, what is the acceptable price for losses among civilians in the ongoing anti-terrorist operation? Who decides on criteria for determining the proportionality of the use of force?

These and other factors give reasons to believe that the anti-terrorism coalition is in the face of crisis. Looking at the core of the problem, it seems that this coalition lacks collective arrangements - ie equality among all its members in decision-making on the strategy and, especially, operational tactics. It so happens that in order to control a totally new situation as it evolved after 9/11, instead of the required genuine cooperative effort, including a joint analysis and coordination of practical steps, the mechanisms designed for a unipolar world started to be used, where all decisions were to be taken in a single center while the rest were merely to follow. The solidarity of the international community fostered on the wave of struggle against terrorism turned out to be somehow "privatized".

These unusually sharp words underline the dissipation of the regional consensus over the war. Later, on September 28, at a press conference in the UN headquarters, Lavrov alleged that in a spirit of "prejudiced bias", the US was blocking the Moscow-led Collective Security Treaty Organization from helping to stabilize Afghanistan.

He also implied that the US vainly tried to block any reference to countering drug trafficking in the latest UN Security Council resolution on Afghanistan so as to deny Russia a role. He said, "Not quite full consideration is given to the assessments and the analyses of all members of the world community when making very important decisions which later tell on the situation of all."

A spat has since erupted over a UN-NATO cooperation agreement relating to the Afghan war allegedly signed "secretly" by a pliant secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, and his NATO counterpart, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer. on September 23 in New York. Russia has threatened to raise the matter in the UN Security Council. To quote Lavrov, "We [Russia] asked both [the UN and NATO] secretariats what this could mean and we are waiting for a reply, but we warned the UN leadership in the strictest fashion that things of this kind must be done without keeping secrets from member states and on the basis of powers and authority held by the secretariats."

Russian envoy to NATO Dmitry Rogozin said on Wednesday that Moscow would consider the Ban-Scheffer agreement "illegitimate", and as merely reflecting Ban's "personal opinion". As can be expected, Ban is keeping mum, while Scheffer contested the Russian allegation. Indeed, cracks are appearing in the US-Russia understanding over the anti-terrorism campaign in Afghanistan. A turf war is ensuing - Washington is determined to exclude Russia from Afghanistan and Moscow insisting on its legitimate role.

Iranian posturing
Similarly, Tehran also has raised the ante on Afghanistan. After having supported the US intervention in Afghanistan in 2001, in the recent period several statements highly critical of the US-led war in Afghanistan have appeared, attributed to the Iranian leadership. The latest high-profile statement was the criticism by the chairman of the Expediency Council, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, at a meeting with the visiting former UN secretary general Kofi Annan, where he lamented that the "occupiers" who created "insecurity" in Afghanistan and Pakistan were now "unable to rein it in".

More ominously, Tehran has invited former Afghan president Burhanuddin Rabbani, who led the anti-Taliban coalition (Northern Alliance) in the 1990s to visit Iran. Receiving him in Tehran on Sunday, the speaker of the Iranian parliament, (Majlis) Ali Larijani, told Rabbani, "The situation in Afghanistan is sorrowful and regrettable." He said the presence of foreign forces is creating "insecurity" in the loss of innocent lives and is causing rampant drug-trafficking.

In another statement in the Majlis two days earlier, Larijani condemned the US attacks on the Pakistani tribal areas in Waziristan. This was the first time an Iranian leader specifically took exception to the US military operations inside Pakistani territory. He said Iran was concerned about the extent of the devastation and the death toll in Waziristan and that the US had exceeded the limits of the Geneva Convention in fighting terrorism. "Every single day, civilians are falling victim to the US-led fight against terrorism," he said, adding the US was "destroying" Waziristan under the "pretext of fighting terrorism".

Most significantly, Tehran has broken its silence on the US-British-Saudi efforts to negotiate reconciliation with the Taliban. This has come, curiously enough, in the form of a statement by the powerful chairman of the Majlis National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, Alaeddin Broujerdi. Long-time observers of the Afghan scene would recognize Broujerdi as the principal designer and architect of the Northern Alliance and a key strategist of the anti-Taliban resistance in the 1996-98 period.

Conceivably, Tehran has dropped a meaningful hint by fielding Broujerdi to speak on the Western efforts to reconcile with the Taliban. Broujerdi firmly repudiated the recent US propaganda that Tehran was mellowing toward the Taliban. Talking to a visiting French parliamentary delegation led by Socialist leader Jean-Louis Bianco on Sunday, Broujerdi underlined Tehran's continued opposition to the Taliban. He sharply criticized the European countries for adopting a conciliatory attitude towards the Taliban. He counseled them that instead they ought to extend unequivocal support to the "popular government" in Kabul led by Karzai.

Broujerdi pointed out that the West's attitude and approach toward the Taliban, which is an extremist group, will "damage regional stability and security". He said the root problem is the continued presence of foreign forces and a settlement will be possible only with their withdrawal.

Broujerdi may have signaled that Iran will challenge and counter any Western attempt to invite the Saudis to return to the Afghan chessboard and to co-opt the Taliban so as to perpetuate the US and NATO military presence. We may deduce that the scheduling of Rabbani's visit to Tehran is intended to signal that Iran still has reserves of influence with the Northern Alliance groups, despite the US estimation that these anti-Taliban groups have been scattered or bought over by Western intelligence.

Rabbani seems to have risen to the occasion. He also lent his voice condemning the continued presence of foreign forces on Afghan soil. "At first, they [Western forces] entered Afghanistan with the slogan that they would establish security and fight terrorism and drugs, but now Afghans are witnessing an escalation of terrorism and an increased production of narcotics," the inscrutable mujahideen leader told Larijani.

What was perplexing was Rabbani's remark, "The only solution to the Afghan crisis lies in the creation of unity among all national and jihadi [read mujahideen] forces in the country and the establishment of national reconciliation among all tribes without ethnic, tribal and religious prejudice." This was also the proclaimed political platform of the Northern Alliance. To be sure, Iran will oppose any ploy by US and British intelligence to resurrect the paradigm of the 1990s to put the Taliban in power so as to "pacify" Afghanistan and to create a modicum of stability necessary for the development of transportation routes for Caspian energy.

At a time when the fabulous Kashagan oil fields in Kazakhstan are expected to come on stream in 2013, when Washington hopes to reverse the tide of Russia-Turkmenistan energy cooperation, when volatility in the southern Caucasus impedes the advancement of new trans-Caspian pipelines, then, Afghanistan bounces back as the most realistic and viable evacuation route for Caspian energy bypassing Russia and Iran - provided the ground situation could be stabilized and security provided which investors and oil companies would find reassuring.

Indian dilemma
Both Russia and Iran will be keenly watching how India, which was a soul mate in the late 1990s staunchly supporting the anti-Taliban alliance, reacts to the current US-British-Saudi move. Indian leaders never tired of underscoring that there was nothing called "good Taliban" and "bad Taliban". That was up until a year ago. However, there is bound to be uneasiness in both Moscow and Tehran as to where exactly Delhi stands at the present juncture in the geopolitics of the region.

One thing is clear: a US-sponsored oil/gas pipeline via Afghanistan suits India, though that may undercut Russia and Iran in the energy sweepstakes.

From all accounts, discussions were going on between the security establishments of India and the US for the past several months regarding an Indian military involvement in Afghanistan. Washington has been pressing for a major Indian role. A two-member Indian team, which visited Kabul in early September, claimed they were on a mission sponsored by the government to make an assessment of the layout for Indian military involvement. The team apparently held discussions with top American diplomats and military officials based in Kabul.

Evidently, Delhi was clueless regarding Saudi King Abdullah's secret mediation with the Taliban. This intelligence failure had to happen. Indian diplomats have been somewhat smug about the unprecedented influence they wielded with the Kabul regime, and as happens in heady times, they began blandly assuming the durability of the present Afghan setup.

They worked shoulder-to-shoulder with their US counterparts in Kabul and American thinking inevitably began coloring Delhi's perceptions. It seems the intellectual osmosis ultimately became one-sided. Under constant US encouragement, the inebriating idea of a major military role in Afghanistan and playing the "great game" crept into the Indian calculus. Delhi seems to have incrementally lost touch with the Afghan bazaar and ground realities.

The US-British-Saudi plan to accommodate the Taliban in the power structure in Kabul creates a dilemma for Indian policymakers. To do an about-turn and begin to distinguish "good" Taliban is ridiculous. It will be seen as kow-towing to the US and will be difficult to rationalize. The antipathy towards the Taliban runs deep in the Indian mindset, since no matter the actual character of the Taliban's "Islamism", a threat perception gained ground in Indian opinion regarding "Islamic terror" from Afghanistan. The Indian establishment unwittingly contributed to this by harping on the ubiquitous "foreign hand" in terrorist activities in India. A rollback of the thesis will take time.

Furthermore, India views that the Taliban as an instrument of policy for Pakistani intelligence and as detrimental to Indian regional security interests. All in all, Delhi will feel greatly relieved if the US abandons its plan to co-opt the "good" Taliban.

In the above scenario, both Tehran and Moscow will be looking forward to foreign minister-level consultations with Delhi in the coming weeks. Indian Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee is scheduled to visit Tehran in early November. Again, in November, in the run-up to the year-end visit by President Dmitriy Medvedev to India, Lavrov and Prime Minister Vadimir Putin will have consultations in Delhi.

The geopolitical reality, however, is that all three countries have transformed in recent years and their foreign policy priorities and orientations have also changed. They relate today to US hegemony in Afghanistan from dissimilar perspectives of national interests.

~~

Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar was a career diplomat in the Indian Foreign Service. His assignments included the Soviet Union, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Germany, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Kuwait and Turkey.

(Copyright 2008 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd

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Related statements

Date  
2008-10-12 Ali Larijani condemned the US attacks on the Pakistani tribal areas in Waziristan
This was the first time an Iranian leader specifically took exception to the US military operations inside Pakistani territory.
Larijani, the speaker of the Iranian parliament, said Iran was concerned about the extent of the devastation and the death toll in Waziristan and that the US had exceeded the limits of the Geneva Convention in fighting terrorism. "Every single day, civilians are falling victim to the US-led fight against terrorism," he said, adding the US was "destroying" Waziristan under the "pretext of fighting terrorism".
2008-10 "United States' desire to consolidate its global role" is unrealizable in a multipolar world.
-- According to Dmitry Medvedev, President of Russia, in a major speech regarding European security at the World Policy Conference in Evian, France
2008-09-27 “More and more questions are being raised as to what is going on in Afghanistan. First and foremost, what is the acceptable price for losses among civilians in the ongoing anti-terrorist operation? Who decides on criteria for determining the proportionality of the use of force?

These and other factors give reasons to believe that the anti-terrorism coalition is in the face of crisis. Looking at the core of the problem, it seems that this coalition lacks collective arrangements - ie equality among all its members in decision-making on the strategy and, especially, operational tactics. It so happens that in order to control a totally new situation as it evolved after 9/11, instead of the required genuine cooperative effort, including a joint analysis and coordination of practical steps, the mechanisms designed for a unipolar world started to be used, where all decisions were to be taken in a single center while the rest were merely to follow. The solidarity of the international community fostered on the wave of struggle against terrorism turned out to be somehow "privatized"."
-- Sergei Lavrov, Russian foreign minister, at the annual United Nations General Assembly forum

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2007-07-24Highlights in the History of U.S. Relations With Russia, 1780-June 2006
2007-07-31The American Empire is Failing – A Good Thing for America and the World -- An Interview with Terry Paupp
2007-08-16Text: President Bush Addresses the Nation
2007-03-24Is the American Empire on the Brink of Collapse?
2006-12-03Baghdad Year Zero - Pillaging Iraq in pursuit of a neocon utopia
2006-12-20Text of Gore speech
2006-09-23Europe Learns the Wrong Lessons
2006-10-25US: world empire of chaos
2006-10-13Interview Vali Nasr
2007-09-07Understanding the U.S.-Israel Alliance: An Israeli Response to the Walt-Mearsheimer Claim
2007-09-24Russia bolsters ties with Iran
2007-09-11Lessons from the Bloc
2007-11-11The Next Act -- Is a damaged Administration less likely to attack Iran, or more?
2007-10-17Iran: Nuclear programme
2008-01-29THE WAR ON TERROR: FOUR YEARS ON; Taking Stock Of the Forever War
2008-01-10Daughter of the West
2007-12-29European Union-Russia summit a diplomatic debacle
2007-12-29His Toughness Problem — and Ours
2007-12-27A Conversation With Benazir Bhutto
2008-01-02Turkish accession to the European union: challenges and opportunities
2007-11-14The Case for the Amero: The Economics and Politics of a North American Monetary Union
2007-11-12IRAN AND WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION
2007-11-28Does the Future Belong to China?
2008-02-22Conversations in International Relations: Interview with John J. Mearsheimer (Part II)
2008-02-22Three blind men confront the elephant that is this globalization era’s radical extremist reaction--and surprise! They all see a different beast!
2008-03-05The radical dawa in transition -- The rise of Islamic neoradicalism in the Netherlands
2008-02-08Assessing the Islamist Threat, Circa 1946
2008-04-05Is Iran Next? The Importance of Geopolitics
2008-04-05Oil, Geopolitics, and the Coming War with Iran
2008-03-24Globalization And The Development Of Underdevelopment Of The Third World
2008-03-16Bush is an idiot, but he was right about Saddam
2008-06-03Some European Perspectives on Terrorism
2008-06-27President Delivers "State of the Union"
2008-06-15President Bush Outlines Iraqi Threat
2008-06-15THE GEOPOLITICS OF CHINA: A Great Power Enclosed
2008-05-14Resisting the Empire
2008-05-27Laptop Jihadi
2008-06-01Why NATO Troops Can't Deliver Peace in Afghanistan
2008-08-14Black Gold Against the Soul -- Book Review
2008-08-21The Breaking Point -- A New Age of Torture
2008-08-07Brzezinski’s bunker
2008-07-07Bush and bin Laden
2008-07-15A war waiting to happen
2009-05-08The Trilateral Commission -- Membership 2008
2009-05-08A Leadership Review of the Barack Obama Administration
2009-05-12Rebranding the Long War, Part 1 -- Obama does his Bush impression
2009-03-15Squaring the Pentagon
2008-09-15Georgia and the Balance of Power
2008-09-13The Emerging Water Wars
2008-10-11Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam
2008-10-31Preventing and Responding to Internal Conflict: When is it Right for Others to Intervene?
2008-12-03Right at the Edge
2008-12-15New York Times Misleads on Taliban Role in Opium Trade
2008-12-22Manama Dialogue (Bahrain) As Delivered by Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates
2006-10-27Dick Cheney’s Song of America
2006-11-02World entering dangerous era of US impotence
2006-11-19PREPARING FOR A NEW COLD WAR, Part 2 - Asymmetric challenge to the US colossus
2006-09-12The Bubble of American Supremacy
2006-09-05Afghan Symbol for Change Becomes a Symbol of Failure
2006-12-18“Osama’s Dream”
2007-01-23Crusading in the Arc of Instability - George Bush's Crusading Scorecard (2001-2007)
2007-02-18After Neoconservatism
2007-02-28Speech at the 43rd Munich Conference on Security Policy
2007-02-20FT interview: Mohamed ElBaradei
2007-03-03Scapegoating Pakistan
2007-04-13Analysis: Arabian Medicis
2007-04-13India, China and the Asian axis of oil
2007-04-02From the Wonderful Folks Who Brought You Iraq
2007-08-20A False Choice in Pakistan
2007-08-10The Role of Pakistan's Military Intelligence (ISI) in the September 11 Attacks
2007-08-12How the ‘Good War’ in Afghanistan Went Bad
2007-08-05The End of Cowboy Diplomacy
2007-08-08Red Mosque: Endgame for Musharraf?
2007-07-29Al-Qaida: the unwanted guests
2007-07-16Iran: A Bridge too Far?
2007-05-30The great escape
2007-05-31The Case for Bombing Iran
2007-05-11Turkey stakes a Central Asian claim
2007-05-14Timeline: Nato
2007-05-15The New Demographic Balance in Europe and its Consequences
2007-05-10A Reporter At Large: In The Party Of God (Part II)
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 4 -- The Global Challenge of WMD Terrorism
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Briefing on Release of 2006
2007-05-02President Bush Meets with EU Leaders -- 2007 U.S.-EU Summit
2007-06-05President Bush Visits Prague, Czech Republic, Discusses Freedom
2007-06-07US missiles hit Russia where it hurts
2007-06-13Press Conference by the President
2007-06-18Israel-Lebanon conflict - timeline of events
2007-07-08Bin Laden's Fatwa
2007-07-04Grand Strategy for a Divided America
2008-07-05Symposium: Israel's Test
2008-07-30OBAMA, THE DEMOCRATIC ‘WAR PRESIDENT’
2008-08-28Vice President's Remarks on the 90th National Convention of the American Legion
2008-05-29Defense Issues for the Next Administration
2008-03-14Aims and Methods of Europe's Muslim Brotherhood
2008-03-23Dissecting the Danish Cartoon Controversy
2008-04-05The Coming of Eurabia
2008-02-21The Spread of Nuclear Weapons: More May Better
2007-12-18Time for smart power
2007-12-20Press Conference by the President
2007-12-22Clinton on Foreign Policy at University of Nebraska
2007-11-02Vice President's Remarks to the Heritage Foundation
2007-09-06Excerpts from an interview with Lee Kuan Yew
2007-08-27Iran risks attack over atomic push, French president says
2008-12-27Opening Statement before the International Military Tribunal
2008-12-03Symposium: Iran: The Countdown
2008-11-08United States Fateful Choice: Save Afghanistan Or Save Pakistan?
2008-11-11The Case for Restraint -- Ruth Wedgwood responds
2008-11-16Bill Moyers Journal -- November 14, 2008 -- Transcript
2008-11-19Afghanistan – Worth the Sacrifice -- John Hutton Address
2008-11-2321st Century Strategies For Sustainability
2008-11-01The End Of Arrogance -- America Loses Its Dominant Economic Role
2008-10-11America and Political Islam: Clash of Cultures or Clash of Interests?
2008-10-12Operation Sarkozy : how the CIA placed one of its agents at the presidency of the French Republic
2008-10-12Afghanistan: A country locked in a spiral of doom
2008-09-13The Brazilian Military Is Back, As It Fleshes Out Its Weaponry And Strategies
2008-09-12A Grim Anniversary
2009-02-11The Myth of Grand Strategy
2009-02-12Obama’s Prime-Time Press Briefing -- Transcript
2009-02-23Transcript of the CBC News interview with Obama
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 1. Strategic Assessment
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: South and Central Asia Overview
2009-06-07The Wages of Hubris and Vengeance -- The Future of Israel and the Decline of the American Empire
2009-06-13Remarks By The President On A New Beginning
2009-07-16Why we must win in Afghanistan
2007-06-28Outsourcing Torture -- The secret history of America’s “extraordinary rendition” program
2007-07-12Republic or empire: A National Intelligence Estimate on the United States
2007-06-19Comparing US & Palestine homicide rates
2007-06-19CNN LATE EDITION WITH WOLF BLITZER
2007-06-08Interview with Condoleezza Rice conducted by Wolf Blitzer, CNN Late Edition, 8 September 2002
2007-06-06Nato’s Islamists
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 1 -- Strategic Assessment
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Middle East and North Africa Overview
2007-05-10Six Nightmares: Real Threats in a Dangerous World and How America Can Meet Them
2007-05-03Timeline: Al-Qaeda
2007-05-22We're Number One! America Leads the World in War Profits
2007-05-17Rehabilitating US Imperialism
2007-05-30Lost in transition
2007-05-26The two 'kings' of Iran
2007-07-16Cheney pushes Bush to act on Iran
2007-07-15Viewpoint: Russia's missile fears
2007-07-31Franco – Arab Ties Could Yet Survive Sarkozy’s U-Turn
2007-08-09Is Pakistan Likely to Become a Taliban State?
2007-08-16China, Russia, Central Asian leaders meet in security summit
2007-08-17Russia Sends Long Bombers Back on Patrol
2007-03-30China vs Japan: FTAs, oil and Taiwan
2007-03-05Timeline: al-Qaida
2007-03-05JOHN PILGER: THIS WAR OF LIES GOES ON
2007-03-21Chris Hedges: The Christian Right’s War on America
2007-02-19Chomsky on Iran, Iraq, and the Rest of the World
2007-02-10Q&A: Neocon power examined
2006-12-15The Israel Lobby
2006-11-28THE NEW WORLD OIL ORDER, Part 2 - Russia tips the balance
2006-09-17Triple-pronged Jihad -- Military, Economic and Cultural
2006-11-19PREPARING FOR A NEW COLD WAR, Part 1 - A war the West can't win
2006-11-22Full text: Vladimir Putin interview
2006-10-26President Bush on Iraq
2006-10-18The Clash of Cultures and American Hegemony
2007-08-27Sarkozy Says He's Willing to Back Turkey-EU Talks (Update1)
2007-08-29Making America Safer by Defeating Extremists in the Middle East
2007-08-27Sarkozy calls for troop exit from Iraq
2007-11-01Noam Chomsky - Controlled Asset Of The New World Order
2007-11-10Gorbachev's Eurasian strategy. (Mikhail S. Gorbachev)
2007-10-20The Coming Civil War In Mexico
2007-10-23Torture in the Name of Freedom
2007-10-10India's Tough Choice on Iran
2007-10-15The new Taliban
2007-10-04Iran Is Found To Be a Lair of Al Qaeda - Intelligence Estimate Cites Two Councils
2007-10-08'I Am not a Warmonger'
2007-12-22Bush/Gore Second Presidential Debate October 11
2007-12-22Iran - Nuclear Chronology - 2006
2007-12-10Bin Laden Attempting to Strip U.S. Allies from Anti-Terrorism Coalition
2007-12-10Bilderberg 2007: Welcome to the Lunatic Fringe
2007-12-08September 11, 2001: The French Knew Much About It
2007-12-09The History and Unwritten Future of Salafism
2007-12-02The Smart Way to Beat Tyrants Like Chavez
2007-11-12FETHULLAH GULEN AND HIS LIBERAL "TURKISH ISLAM" MOVEMENT
2008-01-11The General in his Labyrinth
2008-01-07Azzam the American -- The making of an Al Qaeda homegrown
2008-02-01Iraq: The Way Out -- Transcript
2008-01-31The Power Elite's Use Of Wars And Crises
2008-01-31THE NEW WORLD ORDER' -- A Critique and Chronology
2008-02-02A Statesman Without Borders
2008-02-04A China base in Iran?
2008-02-04Going bankrupt: The US's greatest threat
2008-01-24Henry Kissinger -- Diplomacy in the Post-9/11 Era
2008-01-21Stabilization and Democratization: Renewing the Transatlantic Alliance
2008-01-23Balochistan & the New World Order
2008-01-14Belgo-British Conference 2005 -- 2020 – a new horizon for Europe
2008-02-18The Next Christianity
2008-02-09New Delhi's War Hysteria
2008-02-23The Two Faces of Saudi Arabia
2008-02-29Islamist Bubbles -- Beware the light at the end of the Islamist tunnel
2008-04-07Famine, food and fertilizer
2008-04-01The Big Guns Behind the Global War Machine -- The WTO and the Global War System
2008-03-22"Allah Will Not Change the Condition of a People"
2008-03-19The new liberal imperialism
2008-03-29PAKISTAN & AL QAEDA: US REVIEWS OPTIONS
2008-05-29Advice for the Nuclear Abolitionists
2008-05-31Israel at Sixty: Asymmetry, Vulnerability, and the Search for Security
2008-05-26The Failed States Index 2007
2008-04-24A Dissenter’s Guide to Foreign Policy
2008-04-22The March to War: Israel Prepares for War against Lebanon and Syria
2008-06-27The Wrong War -- Why We Lost in Vietnam -- Chapter One
2008-06-30Preparing the Battlefield
2008-06-23How Should the Middle East Invest Its Oil Profits? -- America's Free Lunch is Over
2008-06-25Samson's Fate
2008-07-31Drilling in Afghanistan
2008-07-31Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre delivers speech at Harvard University
2008-08-12The Myth of Grass-Roots Terrorism -- Why Osama bin Laden Still Matters
2008-07-16Obama stands by timetable for Iraq
2008-07-16Nations with vast oil wealth gaining clout
2008-09-07Terrorized by 'War on Terror'
2009-07-22Beyond Dependence: How To Deal With Russian Gas -- Policy Brief
2009-07-20"Watch What We Do, Not What We Say"
2009-06-27U.S., Germany speak out in "one voice" on global issues
2009-05-09Viewpoint: The case for global integration
2009-05-11Riga Summit Declaration
2009-05-13NBC News' Meet The Press: Dick Cheney
2009-02-22Boots on the ground -- Afghanistan and Pakistan
2009-02-17Shock Wave (Anti) Warrior
2009-02-01Preventing and Resolving Deadly Conflict: What Have We Learned?,
2009-02-02Searching for a New World Order
2008-09-12Afghanistan After Seven Years of War -- You Call This a Good War?
2008-09-17Le Feyt Declaration - Peace in Iraq is an option
2008-09-26Has the U.S. Invasion of Pakistan Begun?
2008-10-14Building a Bigger, Better NATO at Riga
2008-10-18Enoch Powell and the Rise of Political Correctness in Britain
2008-11-21For U.S., bigger issues require Russian help
2008-11-20Leonid Ivashov: Heartland Expanding, or The Shanghai Cooperation Organization
2008-11-27Russia plays the Shtokman card
2008-11-13No Breathing Space in Washington -- Don't Let Barack Obama Break Your Heart
2008-11-11The Case for Restraint -- Francis Fukuyama responds
2008-11-11'What's Looming in Ukraine Is more Threatening than Georgia'
2008-11-08For Eyes of President-Elect Obama Only
2008-12-06Muslim Revolution -- How Washington Arrogance Helped Drive the Mumbai Attacks
2008-12-07Obama’s Speech in Berlin -- Transcript