Afghanistan

Drones: The Future of Warfare?

Daniel Bruntstetter • Apr 10 2012 • Articles

Drones will be part of the future of warfare as their advantages can be exploited by political leaders. Yet, drones are only part of a wide array of surveillance and military options.

No Brakes

Harvey M. Sapolsky • Mar 3 2012 • Articles

As with America’s war in Afghanistan, there now can be wars without end thanks to a professional military, new technology, and a changing politics of party competition.

Review – The Afghan Way of War

Martin J. Bayly • Mar 1 2012 • Features

In the current intervention in Afghanistan, the policy debate has often been shrouded in the sterile language of state-building and counter-insurgency.

Understanding the Human Terrain in Warfare: A Clash of Moralities

Dan G. Cox • Jan 18 2012 • Articles

Proof of concept programs are, by their very nature, cutting edge experiments funded to enhance the efficiency and morality of the warfare the U.S. Army is charged with conducting. It is unreasonable to assume that these programs will come out of the box perfect.

What should we expect from the Afghanistan Conference in Bonn?

Stefan Wolff • Dec 2 2011 • Articles

The 2011 Conference needs to make clear that the Afghan government and people, and their international partners, are united in their efforts to make tangible and sustainable progress towards a more stable Afghanistan in a more stable region.

From Absence to Absence: The Visual Culture of The ‘War on Terror’

David Campbell • Nov 9 2011 • Articles

Throughout the last decade, news photography has re-presented the ‘war on terror’, in the form of military action in Afghanistan and Iraq, in ways consistent with military strategy. Much photojournalism exists within and reproduces an ‘eternal present’, obscuring the frames that narrow its perspective, rendering casualties and context as absent.

Greater Sino-American cooperation needed in Afghanistan

Elizabeth Wishnick • Aug 12 2011 • Articles

Considering China’s unease with a large foreign military presence on its borders, one would expect the U.S. drawdown of military forces in Afghanistan to be welcomed in Beijing and result in greater U.S.-China cooperation on Afghanistan. However, the U.S. and China have different goals and timetables regarding this conflict, which pose challenges to their bilateral relationship.

A Silk Route to Peace

Kirthi Jayakumar • Jul 26 2011 • Articles

The Taliban remains a very deeply rooted part of Afghani social and political life. Consequently, they cannot be ignored. The Taliban should be won over with a comprehensive set of policies deploying not just negotiations and reconciliatory talks, but also the creation of a political framework that will engage the Taliban in a positive role that is most conducive to Afghanistan’s progress.

COSTS NOT FORGOTTEN

Harvey M. Sapolsky • Jul 20 2011 • Articles

In the past I have complained about the fecklessness of America’s allies, citing most especially their failure to carry a fair share of the global security burden. More recently, I have softened my complaints somewhat, recognizing that the allies are merely pursuing the most attractive political option available to them.

Review – The Good War: NATO and the Liberal Conscience in Afghanistan

Martin J. Bayly • Jul 18 2011 • Features

One of the challenges facing anyone who wishes to write on the war in Afghanistan is to squeeze this fiendishly difficult topic into an appropriate framework. It is not easy to find an approach that avoids oversimplifying the issues, or bamboozling the reader into boredom, confusion, deep cynicism, or a combination of all three.

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