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After the Fire: Shaping the Future U.S. Relationship with Iraq
Author(s): Dr. John A. Nagl, Brian BurtonType of Publication: ReportDate: 06/11/2009Since 2003, debates about America’s role in Iraq have focused on how to withdraw U.S. forces. Yet the search for an “end game” emphasizes a short-term objective - getting out of Iraq - and sidesteps the strategic imperative of establishing an enduring relationship with a key country in a region of vital importance to the United States.
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Beyond Bullets: A Pragmatic Strategy to Combat Violent Islamist Extremism
Type of Publication: ReportDate: 06/09/2009Violent Islamist extremism will remain a potent threat to U.S. national security for the foreseeable future. On our own soil, catastrophic terrorism — employing chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear weapons — remains a remote but grave risk.
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Beyond Bullets: Strategies for Countering Violent Extremism
Author(s): Dr. John A. Nagl, Kristin M. Lord, Seth Rosen, Daniel Benjamin, Larry Diamond, Dr. David Kilcullen, Camille Pecastaing, Harvey M. Sapolsky, Alice E. HuntType of Publication: ReportDate: 06/08/2009To counter the threat from violent Islamist extremism more effectively, the Center for a New American Security launched a strategy development process modeled after President Eisenhower’s Project Solarium.
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A Pathway to Success in Afghanistan: The National Solidarity Program
Type of Publication: Policy BriefDate: 03/16/2009March 2009 - In a new policy brief published by CNAS, authors John Nagl, Andrew Exum, and Ahmed Humayun recommend that the United States increase its support for Afghanistan's National Solidarity Program (NSP) and similar development initiatives. Launched in 2002 by Afghanistan's Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD), the NSP is a rural development project that disburses modest grants to elected village councils. The NSP has not just simply provided tangible services to Afghans; it is "owned" by Afghans and run with an emphasis on transparency.
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Tell Me Why We’re There? Enduring Interests in Afghanistan (and Pakistan)
Type of Publication: Policy BriefDate: 01/22/2009January 2009 - After seven years and the deaths of more than a thousand American and coalition troops, there is still no consensus on whether the future of Afghanistan matters to the United States and Europe, or on what can realistically be achieved there. According to CNAS experts Nathaniel Fick, David Kilcullen, John Nagl, and Vikram Singh, "Afghanistan does matter."
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Institutionalizing Adaptation: It’s Time for a Permanent Army Advisor Corps
Author(s): Dr. John A. NaglType of Publication: ReportDate: 06/27/2007The most important military component of the Long War will not be the fighting we do ourselves, but how well we enable and empower our allies to fight with us. After describing the many complicated, interrelated, and simultaneous tasks that must be conducted to defeat an insurgency, the new Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual notes “Key to all these tasks is developing an effective host-nation (HN) security force.” Indeed, it has been argued that foreign forces cannot defeat an insurgency; the best they can hope for is to create the conditions that will enable local forces to win for them. [We] will need far more urgently in years to come—an Army that includes a standing Advisor Corps organized, designed, trained, and equipped to develop professional host nation security forces that can build freedom abroad.
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Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife: Counterinsurgency Lessons from Malaya and Vietnam
Author(s): Dr. John A. Nagl, Peter J. SchoomakerType of Publication: BookDate: 09/15/2006| more |





















