Afghanistan, Central Asia, and U.S./NATO and Russia: Four New Carnegie Council Papers
U.S. Global Engagement Program
August 17, 2009
| Children in Afghanistan Photo courtesy of Dr. Jeffrey D. McCausland |
Program director David C. Speedie notes that four major points emerge from the spirited discussion in these papers:
- The U.S./NATO and Russia have clear and urgent common interests in promoting long-term stability in Afghanistan, yet cooperation between Russia and the West is "episodic," rather than strategic or systematic.
- Afghanistan must be seen, not in isolation, but in a broader Central Asian context.
- Afghanistan is now, as one author puts it, "Obama's War."
- Although the Russian and American authors see NATO very differently, all agree that the very future of NATO may be viewed through the Afghan lens. Indeed, current challenges may render NATO obsolete in its present form.
- Obama's War
Dr. Jeffrey D. McCausland, Carnegie Council Senior Fellow and Penn State Dickinson School of Law
- State of Denial? NATO at 60 and the War in Afghanistan
Lieutenant Colonel Rick Olsen, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
- Prospects for U.S.-Russia Cooperation in Central Asia
Dr. Yuri Morozov, Academy of Military Sciences, Institute for Far Eastern Studies, and Institute for United States and Canada Studies (ISKRAN)
- Pakistani, Afghan, and Iranian Factors of Influence on the Central Asian Region
Dr. Sergey Luzianin, Institute of the Far East--Russian Academy of Sciences
The first set of four papers are on U.S.-Russian Arms Control Priorities.
Read More: Afghanistan WarArmed Conflict, Collective Security, International Relations, War on Terror , , Afghanistan, Iran, Russia, United States



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