The Future of Afghanistan and U.S. Foreign Policy
A Publication of the Chicago Project on Security and Terrorism and ForeignAffairs.com
| Ten Years After Bonn
Perspectives and Analysis
The Chicago Project on Security and Terrorism (CPOST), ForeignAffairs.com, and the Council on Foreign Relations presents a special collection examining Afghanistan ten years following the fall of the Taliban. This collection is comprised of a wide-range of perspectives from top military leaders, policy makers, and academics who weigh the impact of U.S. and Western foreign policy in Afghanistan, and the best course of action for the future. |
PERSPECTIVE The Three Futures for Afghanistan ZALMAY KHALILZAD Former U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan and Iraq, and Permanent U.S. Representative to the U.N. PERSPECTIVE The Case for Continuing the Counterinsurgency Campaign In Afghanistan FREDERICK W. KAGAN and KIMBERLY KAGAN Frederick W. Kagan: Director of the Critical Threats Project, American Enterprise Institute. Kimberly Kagan: President, Institute for the Study of War. PERSPECTIVE Leaving Afghanistan to the Warlords STEPHEN BIDDLE Senior Fellow for Defense Policy, Council on Foreign Relations PERSPECTIVE A Shift in the Afghanistan Stratgy JOHN NAGL President, Council for New American Security PERSPECTIVE JASON LYALL Yale University PERSPECTIVE An Absence of Strategic Thinking PAUL L. YINGLING Security Studies, George C. Marshall Center, Germany. PERSPECTIVE Washington's Colonial Conundrum in Afghanistan IVAN ARREGUIN-TOFT Boston University |
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FEATURED RESOURCES CPOST Primer on Vimeo. CPOST PRIMER
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FEATURED RESEARCHER
JENNA JORDAN |
9/11 PERSPECTIVES ROBERT PAPE THOMAS SCHELLING What Ever Happened to Nuclear Terrorism? JOHN ESPOSITO The Consequences of Islamophobia RAMI KHOURI |
BLOG December 2, 2011 Lt. Col. JOHN NAGL: A Shift in the Afghanistan Strategy-Put the National Army in Front Now October 5, 2011 Jenna Jordan in the New York Times September 30, 2011 Awlaqi's Death Shows the Practicality of Off-Shore Balancing |
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