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yemen

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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2009) 26 (3): 72–74.
Published: 01 September 2009
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (2): 122–123.
Published: 01 June 2011
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (3): 62–72.
Published: 01 September 2011
..., a peanut-based, high-calorie paste created especially for famine victims. She has stabilized nutritionally. But her other afflictions will be slower to heal. Hadiya, now seven, is psychologically scarred, says Rajia Sharhan, a Yemeni pediatrician and nutrition officer with UNICEF Yemen. While she...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2007) 24 (2): 81–84.
Published: 01 June 2007
...-secretary-general of the League of Arab States. Most recently, at the United Nations, he undertook special missions on behalf of the secretary-general in Congo, Yemen, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sudan. His last post for the United Nations was in Afghanistan, where he led the United Nations Peace Conference...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (3): 113–121.
Published: 01 September 2016
... signs of this in Somalia, Lebanon, Yemen, Libya, Algeria, Sudan, and even corners of Egypt. The U.S., Russia, or Iran can send more troops and drones to Syria-Iraq, but this will not resolve the fundamental problem that shakes the Arab world and sends tremors of terrorism, refugees, and fear...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (3): 1–2.
Published: 01 September 2011
... and towns across Iraq and, in this case, Afghanistan. His most compelling goal was to examine villagers examining us. Introducing his work is a moving tribute to Chris from writer Greg Campbell, who knew him since the two formed a bond back in high school 27 years ago at the age of 14. In Yemen, behind...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (4): 55–60.
Published: 01 December 2016
... only allowing Syrians, Afghans, and Iraqis to traverse their territories. Within days, a few thousand people traveling north from Greece were bottlenecked at Idomeni, a tiny farming village bordering Macedonia. The excluded migrants had escaped violence and poverty in Yemen, Iran, Ethiopia, Eritrea...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (4): 89–95.
Published: 01 December 2016
... crown prince, wanted to usher in a more aggressive foreign policy. “Maybe King Abdullah had more patience in the sense that if it needs more time to bring more states into the mix, let’s take that time,” said Saud Kabli, a Saudi diplomat. “With the developments in Yemen, the new government of Saudi...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2018) 35 (1): 10–15.
Published: 01 March 2018
... (coupled with the flexing of Emirati soft power in the South Asian art scene). Proxy wars in Syria and Yemen mean that Iran is very much out. Yet recently, the way the UAE constructs its national identity has begun to change. 2014 marked the introduction of mandatory national service for men between...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (2): 1–2.
Published: 01 June 2011
... to alcoholism, Russia has evolved only marginally from the communist or even the earlier tsarist era. Map Room reveals some surprising truths about what the people of Yemen think about al-Qaida. Finally, World Policy Journal editor David A. Andelman, in his Coda, reflects on how little Muammar Gaddafi has...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2013) 30 (3): 65–77.
Published: 01 September 2013
... of recent conflicts in Afghanistan, Bahrain, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Pakistan, Syria, and Yemen just to name a few, and these incidents vary significantly not only from country to country, but also within borders. Yet, there is very little analysis of the scope of the problem today. The ICRC...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2001) 18 (3): 53–60.
Published: 01 September 2001
..., have some modest gestures toward the intro­ bothered with even the trappings of democ­ duction of democratic institutions, but racy, while a number of those that did so in these have not gone far and have often the past— Lebanon, Algeria, Yemen, Egypt been reversed.3...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (3): 101–112.
Published: 01 September 2011
... adherents advocate jihad against the West. In this Morocco, the World Bank tells us, one of every two people is illiterate, 83 percent of rural women can’t read, and the educational system ranks below that of Yemen. Morocco finds itself behind Algeria, Tunisia, and even Iran in the percentage of its public...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2001) 18 (3): 49–52.
Published: 01 September 2001
... of the new Syria, and Yemen were centers of great civi­ century— not only influenced the process of lizations in the past. But most other Arab democratization but has had a serious im­ countries are relatively new, having become pact on the development of the entire re­ sovereign states only after...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (1): 111–114.
Published: 01 March 2002
...: an unfinished war remains underway in Afghanistan, U.S. ad­ visors are now deployed across half the world, from the Philippines and Yemen to the con­ tested gorges of the Caucasus— yet with all this happening, the Bush team seems to be bracing for a full-court invasion of Iraq, requiring at a minimum...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2013) 30 (3): 14–19.
Published: 01 September 2013
... of the Middle East, especially Yemen, and the Afghanistan-Pakistan frontier region. The United States and its allies cannot simply ignore the threat. In some select cases, we will need to send in “boots on the ground” or drones. Each alternative has strengths and weaknesses, and the tradeoffs are difficult...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 18 (4): 97–101.
Published: 01 December 2002
... cialist sixth,” Moscow kept pressing outward to arm and aid leftist regimes in Syria, Yemen, Libya, Algeria, Ethiopia, Angola, Mozambique, and, more fatefully, Afghanistan. Thus did Russia acquire the “strategic depth” so coveted by apostles of expansion. All this provides one measure...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2013) 30 (4): 79–86.
Published: 01 December 2013
... what you want in public or even at home. The walls had ears. At least we gained one thing from this revolution. We are free to speak.” Sam R. Kimball, a journalist based in Tunis, has previously reported from Yemen and Egypt, and is researching the role of rap and graffiti in the Tunisian...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (3): 82–90.
Published: 01 September 2011
... and the destroyer USS Cole in the Port of Aden in Yemen in 2000. At the time, the ISI was cooperating with bin Laden to train thousands of international jihadists in Afghanistan. According to the 9/11 Commission, the United States learned that retired ISI chief General Hamid Gul leaked to the Taliban and al-Qaida...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2005) 22 (3): 1–23.
Published: 01 September 2005
... airport in 1999, removing Saddam would have constituted the suicide attack against the USS Cole in a preventive war was elided because the war Yemen in 2000, an Algerian terrorist hi­ would have been justified as enforcing U.N. jacking meant to crash an airliner into the mandates...