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This book is a multidisciplinary study of the Indian Ocean region,
bringing together perspectives from the disciplines of history,
defense and strategic studies, cultural and religious studies, and
environmental studies. From the earliest exchanges through Sumerian
and Harappan trade, to emerging geopolitical alliances in the
twenty-first century, this volume demonstrates both the continuity
and change of the region as well as its unity and diversity. The
expanse of this ocean and its littoral rim is connected through the
social imaginary, which enables these processes. It is with the
stories of the peoples inhabiting this rim that this book is
concerned-told both through micro studies of the everyday lives of
the region's people and through macro studies centered around
civilizations, empires, nation-states, and climate change.
Against the backdrop of disintegrative tendencies in the EU, where
Brexit perhaps most profoundly captures the spirit of current
developments in the EU, this book offers a detailed understanding
of the key issues, challenges, and opportunities that educators
across Europe and beyond encounter on a daily basis when teaching
EU-related course content at higher education institutions. Written
by a team of international academics and practitioners engaged with
teaching, researching, and explaining European integration to
successive generations of students, this edited collection
showcases expert voices on the issues and developments central in
the debate on how to teach the EU efficiently today. Using a wide
variety of case studies, the chapters examine how novel approaches
to teaching and learning, and especially technology-enhanced tools
and methods, can lead to better teaching and learning outcomes in
the Brexit age. A cutting-edge collection of insights from experts
teaching and researching the EU, this book will serve as a timely
resource for educators, researchers, administrators, and
decision-makers.
Ten years ago in Bonn, Germany, the United Nations Envoy to
Afghanistan, Ambassador Lakhdar Brahimi, and U.S. Envoy to the
Afghan Opposition, Ambassador James Dobbins, led a diverse group of
international diplomats and warriors to consensus and charted the
political course for Afghanistan well into the decade. The process
that led to the Bonn Agreement (Bonn 2001, or Bonn I) reflects the
best of U.S. and United Nations statesmanship and was the result of
the effective application of military and diplomatic power. Bonn
2001 was successful for five reasons: The U.S.-supported Northern
Alliance held the clear military advantage; The U.S. interagency
position was effectively synchronized; Dobbins paved the way for
success at Bonn by thorough bilateral preparation and consultations
with international actors-he met personally with nearly all the
international participants and representatives; Brahimi and Dobbins
merged their negotiating experience and artfully used multilateral
negotiations to meld national interests into cohesive commitments;
Bonn Conference objectives were limited and achievable and the U.S.
negotiating team was empowered to exercise initiative in pursuit of
those objectives. As the Bonn Conference's 10th anniversary
approaches, the fundamental challenge is simply stated: how can
U.S. national interests in Afghanistan be achieved with fewer
resources? This paper answers that question through an analysis of
the process that produced the Bonn Agreement in 2001. It offers
step-by-step recommendations for U.S. policymakers on how to shape
specific conditions in Afghanistan, beginning with Bonn 2011 (Bonn
II), for the post-2014 period. Those recommendations include: The
United States must demonstrate long-term commitment to Afghanistan
in the form of a formal strategic partnership announced at Bonn;
Following Bonn, the United States must set conditions for a
negotiated settlement through military and diplomatic means: The
United States should announce its intention to maintain a reduced
military force in Afghanistan well beyond 2014; The United States
should fund the Afghanistan National Security Forces (ANSF) at the
present manning objective (352,000) through 2015, then reassess
this requirement; The coalition should intensify efforts to kill or
capture members of the insurgent Leadership; Bilateral preparation
should begin with President Hamid Karzai and the issue of Afghan
political reforms. Bonn I was about balancing control of central
government offices. Following Bonn II, Afghans should rebalance
power between the central government and provincial governments.
Insurgents willing to lay down arms could play a legitimate role in
local governance; Bilateral preparation should then proceed to
Afghanistan's neighbors and Russia, China, Turkey, and Saudi
Arabia. This paper offers recommendations for dealing with each
country in light of Bonn I and events to date. Without U.S.
commitment through the end of this decade, Afghanistan will likely
fall back into the civil war it experienced in the early 1990s. As
fighting spreads, India and Pakistan will back their Afghan proxies
and the conflict will intensify. This situation would not only
create opportunities for safe haven for extremists, but also invite
a confrontation between adversarial and nuclear-armed states. The
growing strength of Pakistan's own insurgency and the existential
threat it could pose in the future intensifies this risk. The
potential for such an outcome runs counter to U.S. and coalition
interests. Bonn 2001 began a journey toward Afghanistan's stability
and representative government that has demanded great sacrifice by
Afghans, Americans, and other members of the coalition. That
journey has come far from its humble beginning and requires
American leadership and energy to remain on course.
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