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Falling Terrorism and Rising Conflicts - The Afghan Contribution to Polarization and Confrontation in West and South Asia (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,751
Discovery Miles 27 510
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Falling Terrorism and Rising Conflicts - The Afghan Contribution to Polarization and Confrontation in West and South Asia (Hardcover, New)
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The Taliban's fall and the massive American military and political
presence in South and West Asia have created grounds for a
polarization into two camps: India, Iran and Russia, to which China
is affiliated, and the United States and Pakistan. In Peimani's
analysis, their incompatible interests will push them towards
confrontations with regional and international implications.
Contrary to expectations, the fall of the Taliban did not bring
peace and stability to Afghanistan. The Afghan interim government
is simply too weak to act as a central government; this results in
the re-emergence of warlords, turf wars, and the expansion of drug
trafficking. This unstable situation may well result in the
emergence of Taliban-like groups. Added to this, the threat of the
spillover of instability from Afghanistan into neighboring regions,
on the one hand, and the rapid expansion of American military and
political power in Central Asia, the Caucasus, the Persian Gulf,
Afghanistan, and Pakistan, on the other, have created fear among
the regional powers. The stated indefinite stay of American forces
well after the end of the anti-terrorist war in Afghanistan has
worsened that fear as it reflected the American government's plan
to pursue certain strategic interests unrelated to that war.
Consequently, as Peimani shows, the regional anti-terrorist
coalition has disintegrated in the absence of a common objective to
help focus the region. Fear of the long-term American objectives
and those of its Pakistani ally in South and West Asia incompatible
with those of the regional powers have facilitated the creation of
two camps consisting of Iran, India, and Russia, to which China is
affiliated, and Pakistan and the United States. Respectively, these
implicit and explicit camps are likely to collide over their
regional interests especially in the strategically important
energy-producing Persian Gulf and Caspian Sea regions.
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