Afghanistan after 2014 : five scenarios / Stefan Olsson, Erika Holmquist, Samuel Bergenwall, Helene Lackenbauer.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: [Place of publication not identified] : Swedish Defence Research Agency (FOI), 2012.Description: 100 pages ; 30 cmISBN:- 16501942
- Afghan War, 2001-
- Internal security – Afghanistan
- National security – Afghanistan
- Peace building – Afghanistan
- Economic assistance – Afghanistan
- Postwar reconstruction – Afghanistan
- Economic development – Afghanistan
- Economic assistance, American – Afghanistan
- Afghanistan – Foreign relations
- Afghanistan – Politics and government – 2001-
- Pamphlet UA853. A3.
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monograph | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Pamphlet UA853.A3.O588 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 3ACKU000543552 |
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Pamphlet DS371.4.H365 2019 Behind the scenes of Al-Qa’ida’s media strategy : | Pamphlet UA853.A3.D395 2019 Violent extremist organizations : | Pamphlet UA853.A3.I733 2015 Afghanistan 2014 & beyond : | Pamphlet UA853.A3.O588 2012 Afghanistan after 2014 : | Pamphlet UA853.A3.D435 2014 Afghanistan beyond 2014 : | Pamphlet UA853.A3.R384 2013 After 2014 : | Pamphlet DS371.4.M369 2017 Dynamics of Pakistan’s involvement in the Afghan reconciliation process / |
Cover title.
“April 2012”.
“FOI-R—3424—SE”—cover page.
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents: Executive summary—1. Introduction—2. The Geostrategics of the Afghanistan conflict—3. The role of Pakistan in Afghanistan—4. The Kabul regime : political actors and current trends—5. Prospects for a negotiated peace—6. Post-2014 scenarios—7. Conclusions—8. References—9. Appendix.
Summary: “By the end of 2014 the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), will, if the timetable remains fixed, have withdrawn from Afghanistan. After a period of transition which already has begun the full responsibility for security will be transferred to the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF). But the signs of progress have so far been few. A number of uncertainties keep hanging as a dark cloud at the horizon. The Taliban insurgency is not broken, the ANSF are still not fully manned, and the national government suffers heavily from widespread corruption. The list of problems, that ideally should have been solved many years ago, is long…”—(page 5).
English