Russia & Central Asia

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Two Conservatives Diverge on Our Afghanistan Policy
June 21, 2010 3 min. read

Continuing the topic of partisan (Democratic, Republican, conservative, liberal, realist, idealist, etc.) viewpoints on the US strategy in Afghanistan, here are two different takes on our current policy from within the conservative camp. First is Washington Post journalist George Will, who famously took on a ‘realist’ argument that a large counterinsurgent effort in the country was […]

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Burying the Cold War in Kyrgyzstan?
June 18, 2010 5 min. read

Amidst all the horrific ethnic violence in Kyrgyzstan, there may have been one welcome victim: the zero sum, Cold War style thinking that had governed Russia and America’s approach to the region. For a few nervous days this week, however, the conflict felt as if it could unleash a major regional and even international war. […]

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Bad News Followed By Bad News: How Much Are Americans Willing to Take?
June 15, 2010 3 min. read

Update: Ouch! Both the New York Times and Washington Post have major stories today portraying a fraying confidence in the Obama administration’s Afghan policy. Read both now! In the American news, the words ‘Afghanistan’ has been followed by ‘deaths’, ‘setbacks’, ‘corruption’, etc. far too often of late. American and NATO deaths have been rising in […]

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Ethnic violence is getting worse in Kyrgyzstan's south
June 12, 2010 1 min. read

At least 77 people have died in clashes in the south of Kyrgyzstan, according to Al-Jazeera. It seems that thousands of ethnic Uzbeks, mostly women and children, are fleeing for safety to Uzbekistan. They claim that they have been attacked by militias and by the Kyrgyz military and police. The interim government is appealing to […]

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Having it Both Ways? Russia's Multipolar Tightrope
June 11, 2010 6 min. read

Back in the USSR, there was a strain of dissidents with a very refreshing/ quixotic programme of opposition: they would live “as if”. As if the Soviet Union were a democratic country that actually followed its own laws. Of course, it was only a matter of time before reality caught up to them and they […]

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Human Rights Watch International Film Festival Features Two Afghan Films
June 9, 2010 1 min. read

If you are in the New York Area, I recommend checking out these two films at the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival being held at the Lincoln Center: CAMP VICTORY, AFGHANISTAN explores the reality of building a functioning Afghan military; RESTREPO chronicles the deployment of a platoon of US marines in Afghanistan’s Korengal Valley, […]

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Our Disappearing Wars: 10 Not Enough?
June 8, 2010 1 min. read

Update: The New York Times paper addition this morning featured a large picture of two American servicemen in Afghanistan with a caption detailing the loss of 10 NATO troops yesterday. This was positive to see, though the story of the deadly incidents was not on the front page. Continuing our Disappearing Wars thread: Today 10 […]

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Maqaleh v. Gates Ruling
June 6, 2010 2 min. read

Rob Grace, writer for FPA’s Law and Security Strategy blog (one of my favorites), has covered the recent Maqaleh v. Gates ruling regarding Afghan detainee rights. Grace provides a historical angle to the ruling and tackles further questions in the comments. Here is a piece: Last week the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in […]

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Russia's Two-Faced Environmentalism
June 5, 2010 2 min. read

Outraged at the water pollution caused by the BP oil spill, “Good Cop” Medvedev proposed today a global fund to ensure against and deal with such disasters in the future. But as any schoolboy knows, Russia has had very few qualms about destroying its own environment. Putin may talk a nice talk about how “Russia’s […]

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Voznesensky, Poetry and Politics
June 3, 2010 3 min. read

Andrey Voznesensky, the Russian-Soviet poet who died yesterday, spent his life in a no-man’s land between poetry and politics, ‘left’ and ‘right’, East and West. Along with Bulat Okudzhava, Bella Akhmadulina and Yevgeny Yevtushenko, he formed the core of the Soviet ‘beat poets’ of the post-Stalin thaw. And unlike the likes of Joseph Brodksy and […]

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Afghanistan- Hijab and Women
June 1, 2010 3 min. read
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Hijab is the Arabic word for “Curtain, or Cover”. It is taken from Hajb meaning to cover, to veil, to shelter. Muslim women wear the Hijab for different reasons. Some wear the Hijab to delight their God- in reference to holy Quran. Some to please their families and some to obey the Islamic law. Afghanistan is […]

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Building Vs. Destroying: A Salute to Our Veterans
May 31, 2010 2 min. read

A day before here in the United States we honor all of those men and women who have fought for our armed services, I came across this tragic event that occurred in Khost, Afghanistan just yesterday: There was violence as well in the southeastern province of Khost, where a barely completed high school, built with […]

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