Senior Analyst for Emerging Challenges, NATO Defense College Foundation
Founder, Libya-Analysis LLC
Founder & Director, NATO & the Global Enduring Disorder Project
Senior Analyst for Emerging Challenges, NATO Defense College Foundation
Founder, Libya-Analysis LLC
Founder & Director, NATO & the Global Enduring Disorder Project
Bringing together Qatar, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates to administer postwar Gaza could weaken Iranian and Russian regional influence. Jason Pack explores, in Foreign Press.
Understanding how important Ukraine is to U.S. security reveals how serious the president’s alleged high crimes were.
The West must understand the high-stakes game Russia is engaging in, and use calculated aggression to expose the Kremlin's weak hand.
Instead of conceiving of Ukraine, Libya, or Syria as exotic, far-away conflict zones disconnected from Americans’ daily life, what if we looked at them as the result of America’s abrupt withdrawal from its empire?
Libya should be held up as a poster child for a Western diplomacy that seriously engages with Muslim populations rather than just propping up their dictators.
Surprising as it may be stateside, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump is wildly popular in Libya, and Tripoli needs an unorthodox approach.
Both the United States and Iran are mired in internal political and economic difficulties. Simultaneously, inside the region, both are being outmanoeuvred by an ascendant Turkey.
How the US ambassador killed this week in Benghazi would have handled Libya.
With the erosion of the tentative co-operation of the post-cold war era, the Arctic seemed to be the last bastion of a functional rules-based international order