The Not-So United Front Against the Islamic State
With much of the world seemingly arrayed against the Islamic State, how is the group still so powerful?
Continue reading The Not-So United Front Against the Islamic State
With much of the world seemingly arrayed against the Islamic State, how is the group still so powerful?
Continue reading The Not-So United Front Against the Islamic State
The expansion of ISIS not only poses a direct military threat, but also distracts from other important regional issues such as nuclear proliferation.
Continue reading America’s Myopic Middle Eastern Security Policy
Although full U.S. combat operations officially ended in Afghanistan in 2014, the fight against extremism rages on.
In the past year alone, ISIS has reportedly received over $35 million in ransoms, leading many to question the decision of some states to negotiate with terrorists in order to free kidnapped citizens.
Continue reading “We Don’t Negotiate With Terrorists” – The Economics of Hostage Taking
President Obama’s recently proposed AUMF against the Islamic State is meant to serve political, not legal, ends.
Continue reading Why Obama’s AUMF Has Nothing to Do with Legality
Yemen, a country whose counter-terrorism mission was once deemed a “success” by President Barack Obama, seems to be heading for conflict and bloodshed.
Would a new AUMF actually limit the war-making powers of President Obama or his successors?
New cross-border dynamics in the Middle East have led Turkey to support the Kurds in increasingly visible ways.
Continue reading United Front: Turkey and the Kurds Move Against ISIS