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Reading of the Week: The silent threat. Kidnappings in Burkina Faso



[ © The Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime ]

 Kidnappings of nationals in Burkina Faso surged to record-breaking levels in 2021 and continued at this unprecedented scale throughout 2022. Non-state armed groups - including, most prominently, the Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims, known by its Arabic acronym JNIM (Jama’at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin) - are central perpetrators. According to data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED), kidnappings have increased over 30-fold since 2017, when the security situation in Burkina Faso began to sharply deteriorate (rising from eight incidents in 2017 to 262 in 2021 and 219 in 2022).  

Whither Iran and China? A Limited Partnership, yet Deep and Durable



[ © The Institute for National Security Studies ]

 Recent weeks have seen growing closeness between China and Iran, which peaked with the signing of several important bilateral agreements and successful Chinese mediation between Beijing and Riyadh. What lies behind this rapprochement and what obstacles lie ahead?  

What the Russia-Iran Arms Deals Mean for the Middle East



[ © The Washington Institute for Near East Policy ]

 In the longer term, the increased flow of weapons will likely exacerbate tensions in the region, spur Arab states to enhance their own arsenals, and endanger any U.S. and partner forces that confront Tehran’s proxies.  

Will Hamas and Hezbollah Try Again to Tear the Israeli Spiderweb?



[ © Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies ]

 From their earliest days, Hezbollah and Hamas have seen immense value in closely monitoring Israel’s media. However, their reliance on open-source information has proven a double-edged sword, as both groups have been misled into making poor strategic decisions. Either Hezbollah or Hamas is likely to identify the current crisis in Israel over the new government’s proposed reform of Israel’s judiciary as an opportunity to act against it.  

Strategic priorities for the Russian PMC WAGNER: geopolitics, propaganda and mercenary business



[ © Royal Institute for International Relations ]

 The activities of a Private Military Company (PMC) traditionally involve 3 other parties: the Contracting State, the Territorial State and the Home State. While Western Contracting States generally recognize the Montreux Document (which reaffirms the international legal obligations of States) and Western PMCs observe the self-regulatory ‘International Code of Conduct’ (which serves as the governance and oversight mechanism), Russian PMCs operate in absence of any regulatory provision or national legal framework.  

Accountability for Crimes against Peacekeepers



[ © International Peace Institute ]

 Since 1948, more than 1,000 UN personnel have been killed in malicious acts while serving in UN peacekeeping operations. Since 2013, the vast majority of fatalities have taken place in the Central African Republic (CAR), Mali, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). To address this trend, the UN Secretariat and member states have increasingly focused on strengthening the policy framework on accountability to peacekeepers.  

Reducing the Risks of Artificial Intelligence for Military Decision Advantage



[ © Center for Security and Emerging Technology ]

 Militaries seek to harness artificial intelligence for decision advantage. Yet AI systems introduce a new source of uncertainty in the likelihood of technical failures. Such failures could interact with strategic and human factors in ways that lead to miscalculation and escalation in a crisis or conflict. Harnessing AI effectively requires managing these risk trade-offs by reducing the likelihood, and containing the consequences of, AI failures.  

Forward Together: Women, Peace, & Security & Human Security at NATO



[ © Stimson Center ]

 The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) must adopt a flexible Human Security (HS) approach that can adapt to changing security concerns and addresses the concerns of the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) community. Failure to address these concerns could put NATO at risk of falling short of its aspirations for both WPS and HS, potentially jeopardizing the safety of NATO citizens during active conflicts or crises.  

Future Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing Trends in a Warming World: A Global Horizon Scan



[ © Royal United Services Institute ]

 Comprising everything from small-scale, near-shore activity to industrial-scale, long-distance operations, the current IUU fishing threat has the potential to evolve significantly in a warming world. A global horizon scan explores the impacts of climate change on IUU fishing over the next 10 years and beyond. Illegal, IUU fishing is a multifaceted global threat, occurring worldwide in inland waters, exclusive economic zones (EEZs) and on the high seas.  

Reading of the Week: Striking Back. Iran and the Rise of Asymmetric Drone Warfare in the Middle East



[ © The Washington Institute for Near East Policy ]

 Iranian drone strikes, as exemplified by the September 2019 attack against Saudi Aramco facilities, have jolted Middle East leaders and revealed Tehran’s long-range precision strike capabilities. The regime’s large and growing drone force, which can be used for reconnaissance or strike missions, now poses an existential threat to the Gulf states and a direct threat to Israel, as does its formidable missile force. Moreover, Iranian drones transferred to Russia have had a significant impact on Moscow’s war against Ukraine.  

On the Need to Carefully Calibrate International Sanctions as an Instrument to Fight Corruption in the MENA Region



[ © Euromesco ]

 Businesses thriving on corrupt behavior and a weak and corrupt public sector often go hand in glove. The public sector is either the counterpart of corrupt businesspeople or is responsible for contributing to poor governance by failing to implement laws and regulations, or actively protects corrupt players via a corrupt, or simply incompetent, judiciary system. For corruption to grow in the private sector, authorities have to be complicit and, when they are, a culture of corruption starts spreading.  

Oman: Politics, Security, and U.S. Policy



[ © Congressional Research Service ]

 Since the British withdrawal from the Persian Gulf in the early 1970s, Oman has relied on the United States as a key defense partner, and successive U.S. presidential administrations have considered Oman important to the promotion of regional stability and peace in the Middle East. Over the past decade, Oman has played the role of discreet mediator having served an intermediary in seeking to resolve the ongoing civil conflict in Yemen.