Seven years after the 9/11 attacks, the border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan remains the front line in the war on terror. Pakistan is suffering from great internal challenges, while Afghanistan remains far from stable with a strongly resurgent Taliban. The bloody terrorist attacks in Mumbai have contributed to rising tensions between Pakistan and India and have serious repercussions for the NATO mission in Afghanistan.
On December 18, Brookings Fellow Vanda Felbab-Brown offered a public memo to President-elect Obama with recommendations to expand an agenda of peace and stability to Pakistan and Afghanistan. The memo is the seventh of 12 Brookings memos on the most crucial public policy priorities facing the new president.
A distinguished panel included Felbab-Brown; Lakhdar Brahimi, a former United Nations special representative for Afghanistan and Iraq; Ashraf Ghani, a Brookings nonresident senior fellow and current chancellor of Kabul University, who is a former finance minister of Afghanistan; and Marvin Weinbaum, scholar-in-residence at the Middle East Institute and a former Pakistan and Afghanistan intelligence analyst with the U.S. Department of State. Brookings Senior Fellow Philip Gordon moderated the discussion.
Agenda
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December 18
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Moderator
Philip H. Gordon Former Brookings Expert, Mary and David Boies Senior Fellow in U.S. Foreign Policy - Council on Foreign Relations -
Featured Speakers
Lakhdar Brahimi Special Adviser to the Secretary-General, United NationsVanda Felbab-Brown Director - Initiative on Nonstate Armed Actors, Co-Director - Africa Security Initiative, Senior Fellow - Foreign Policy, Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy, and Technology @VFelbabBrownMarvin G. Weinbaum Director, Afghanistan and Pakistan Studies - Middle East Institute
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