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Friday 16 May 2008
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IISS in the Press
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
Breakaway territories watch and wait
Political predictions for 2008
Realities and challenges to Bangladesh foreign policy: Regional scenario
Rose Revolution leader re-elected Georgia's president
Surprise! No candor from North Korea
As Violence Ebbs, the Next Hurdle for Iraq is Political Progress
The Manama Dialogue: Gulf security and Turkey
Corridors of Power: Capital Differences
Afghanistan: A First Step Toward 'Turning' Moderate Taliban?
Transportation – a terrorist target
Helicopter shortage in overseas missions
Squandered oil bonanza may bring down Iranian President
BAE Buys Tenix Defence to Double Sales in Australia
Recession, Beyond the Economy
Invest energy to tend S-E Asian ties, US urged
American leaders receptive to message, says Teo Chee Hean
Politics & Policies: Ahmadinejad's Iran
Six-nation pact takes aim at Iran
Realism's grim prognosis
NIE opens new windows of opportunity
Searching for a new world order in Davos
Musharraf argues case in Europe
Kosovo - the EU's toughest challenge
After the NIE, the US needs a braver Iran policy
Ashdown withdrawal leaves hole in Afghan effort
Assessing the dirty bomb threat
Sustaining the surge to stability
Press Coverage 2007
Press Coverage 2006
Press Coverage 2005
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IISS-US
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IISS-Asia
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IISS in the Press
January 2008
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January 2008
30 Jan 2008 - - ISN Security Watch - Assessing the dirty bomb threat
According to Beyond the Dirty Bomb: Re-thinking Radiological Terror published by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, "ingestion, inhalation and immersion (I3) attacks, in which radiation doses are delivered internally or by direct contact with the skin, can credibly kill in order of magnitude more people than a dirty bomb, are likely to incite considerably more fear among members of the public, and may require a much lower level of technical skill to execute."
30 Jan 2008 - Bitterlemons International - After the NIE, the US needs a braver Iran policy
In Abu Dhabi, the president excoriated Iran for a litany of sins related to terrorism and fomenting instability throughout the region. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates made a similar tough speech about Iran in December to the International Institute of Strategic Studies' Manama Dialogue forum, where he insisted that Iran is a grave threat to regional stability, whether or not it has nuclear weapons.
29 Jan 2008 - - Straits Times - Sustaining the surge to stability
There are about 42,000 coalition military forces here. (During) the Soviet Afghan war, the Russians stopped their effort with 120,000 or 130,000 troops. I can recall the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London then estimated it would take 300,000 minimum to fight a successful counterinsur-gency here. And at that point the Russians withdrew.
29 Jan 2008 - - Deutsche Press-Agentur - Kosovo - the EU's toughest challenge
The proposal received no more welcome in Belgrade, where parliament in December voted to reject any treaty which did not treat Kosovo as part of Serbia - including the EU deal. That threat "is serious," said Colonel Christopher Langton, senior fellow for conflict and defence diplomacy at the Institute for International Strategic Studies in London. Despite the dangers, however, experts say that the union still has the potential to turn the situation into a stunning success.
29 Jan 2008 - - Reuters - Ashdown withdrawal leaves hole in Afghan effort
Other candidates include Kai Eide, a Norwegian diplomat and highly-respected Balkans expert, and Turkey's Hekmat Cetin, a former NATO civil envoy in Kabul who enjoys Afghan support. "It's not clear if (other candidates) would have the same stature internationally as Ashdown," said Colonel Christopher Langton of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.
28 Jan 2008 - - Christian Science Monitor - Musharraf argues case in Europe
Western countries want to see a decline in extremist activity as well as evidence that Pakistan is doing its best to adhere to democratic norms. But "you have such a complex situation in Pakistan," says Bastian Geigerich, a fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. "You want free and fair elections, but you don't want it all to fall apart," he says. Mr. Geigerich adds that Musharraf "clearly understands how critical he is and will milk it for what it's it worth."
24 Jan 2008 - - Guardian - Realism's grim prognosis
But Kissinger was not the only one to point out that hopes for "real" peace were not all that realistic. Just a few days after his analysis was published, Asharq Al-Awsat featured an article by Mamoun Fandy, the director of the Middle East programme at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in London, who called straightforwardly for a "'No' to Peace", arguing that some sort of "legal settlement" was a more realistic goal. As far as realism or even realpolitik is concerned, Fandy's article
24 Jan 2008 - - Bitter Lemons International - NIE opens new windows of opportunity
By Mark Fitzpatrick, Senior Fellow for Nonproliferation
24 Jan 2008 - - Agence France Presse - Searching for a new world order in Davos
"We don't live in a multi-polar world, we live in a non-polar world," said John Chipman, director general of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies. While the United States is clearly too strong to stay on the sidelines of world affairs, Chipman argued that it was also "too weak" to implement an agenda without wide international support.
23 Jan 2008 - - Los Angeles Times - Six-nation pact takes aim at Iran
Mark Fitzpatrick, a senior nonproliferation expert at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, said it was clear going into Tuesday's talks that they would not involve any significant economic sanctions, such as a halt in gasoline sales to Iran or a block on Iranian oil and gas exports, the only kind of measures that might be likely to produce an immediate and significant effect. Russia and China, and sometimes Western European countries, have opposed such measures.
22 Jan 2008 - - Middle East Times - Politics & Policies: Ahmadinejad's Iran
In a recent paper published by the International Institute of Strategic Studies titled, "Iran under Ahmadinejad: the Politics of Confrontation," Ansari attributes Ahmadinejad's success to "precisely because his reputation for ineptitude and eccentricity meant that he was not taken particularly seriously, and many reformists believed that this ineptitude meant he would not be in post for long." As mayor of Tehran, Ahmadinejad displayed rather unorthodox ways of grabbing the media's attention. For exampl
19 Jan 2008 - - Straits Times - Invest energy to tend S-E Asian ties, US urged
DEFENCE Minister Teo Chee Hean describes South-east Asia's multi-layered security architecture, with its mix of formal and informal structures: First, at the multilateral level there are security forums with broad memberships, such as the Asean Regional Forum which groups 27 countries. In a less formal setting is the annual Shangri-La Dialogue - the only forum where defence ministers from the region and beyond get together.
18 Jan 2008 - - Bloomberg - BAE Buys Tenix Defence to Double Sales in Australia
Australia's military budget rose 2.9 percent in 2006, compared with 2.5 percent in the U.K., according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies. Tenix also boosts BAE's naval...
18 Jan 2008 - - Council on Foreign Relations - Recession, Beyond the Economy
Recession could also heighten the economic stakes of the Iraq war, limiting policy options for the next U.S. president. A November 2007 congressional report details the impact of rising war costs on...
18 Jan 2008 - - Channel News Asia - American leaders receptive to message, says Teo Chee Hean
Mr Teo said: "China, India, Japan - all these countries are seeking to engage countries in Southeast Asia more actively. And I suggested to them that the US may also want to see in what creative ways they can ex-pand their already very strong relationships that they have with various countries in the region, and also as a collective with ASEAN." Mr Teo also met US Defence Secretary Robert Gates, who said he will attend the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore.
15 Jan 2008 - - Times - Squandered oil bonanza may bring down Iranian President
When he became President, oil was $60 a barrel; recently, it has been almost two thirds as much again. Few presidents have been so lucky. But as Ali Ansari, an academic specialising in Iran, argues...
11 Jan 2008 - - BBC News - Helicopter shortage in overseas missions
At first sight, it seems strange that the French government in this case, or often the UN, should have to go cap in hand to beg for additional helicopters. A quick glance at any military almanac...
10 Jan 2008 - - Lloyd's of London - Transportation – a terrorist target
With the overwhelming global terrorist threat now coming from Islamist jihadist groups with a desire to inflict mass civilian casualties, transportation networks are now under greater threat of...
9 Jan 2008 - Radio Free Europe - Afghanistan: A First Step Toward 'Turning' Moderate Taliban?
Christopher Langton, who studies Afghanistan at London's International Institute For Strategic Studies, says it is a particularly important area for President Karzai to stabilize. "If it is...
8 Jan 2008 - Christian Science Monitor - As Violence Ebbs, the Next Hurdle for Iraq is Political Progress
As for Iran and its promise, according to Iraqi and US officials, to stop the funding and arming of Shiite militias, the US says it continues to have a wait-and-see attitude. But many analysts point...