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Prospects for Diplomacy With North Korea - Center for America Progress

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

News Type: USIP in the News

At the end of July 2021, South Korea announced that the two Koreas restored four communication lines that North Korea had cut off in June 2020 when North Korea severed all inter-Korean governmental communication. Days later, North Korea stopped answering routine South Korean calls in apparent protest of the joint U.S.-South Korea military exercises scheduled for August. In October, North Korea began answering military and liaison office communication lines again...

Global Policy

Three killed in protests against military coup in Sudan - risk of further violence in days ahead. - BBC

Saturday, October 30, 2021

News Type: USIP in the News

Three people killed as Sudan's security forces used live ammunition to suppress demonstrations against the military coup. Various groups have stopped sending aid to Sudan - but Joseph Tucker from the U.S. Institute of Peace says much greater pressure is needed from countries like the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt - and warns that there's a risk of further violence in days ahead...

Civilian-Military Relations

The coup in Sudan, explained - Vox

Friday, October 29, 2021

News Type: USIP in the News

Sudan’s move toward democracy is in peril, after the military seized control of the country’s transitional government in a coup. The country’s democratic project began just two years ago, after Sudan’s longtime dictator Omar al-Bashir was ousted amid mass protests in 2019. Civil society and protest leaders and the military ultimately reached a power-sharing arrangement that put both in charge of the country with the commitment of transitioning to full civilian rule, which would lead to a new constitution and elections in 2023...

Civilian-Military Relations

Coup in Sudan - War on the Rocks

Thursday, October 28, 2021

News Type: USIP in the News

Sudan’s top generals seized power on Monday, plunging the country into chaos. The coup leaders arrested Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and imposed a state of emergency. To discuss the latest in Khartoum, we’re joined today on the Warcast by Joseph Tucker. Joseph is a senior expert for the Greater Horn of Africa at the U.S. Institute of Peace...

Civilian-Military Relations

Muqtada al-Sadr Is the United States’ Best Hope - Foreign Policy

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

News Type: USIP in the News

In their national election earlier this month, Iraqis took the unprecedented step of rejecting an Iran-backed coalition of armed Shiite militias while showing a clear preference for Muqtada al-Sadr, a Shiite cleric who promotes a nationalist agenda. Fatah or Conquest Alliance, an umbrella organization of various militias or Popular Mobilization Forces (PMUs) that was led by Pro-Iran Hadi al-Amiri, fell from 48 parliamentary seats in 2018 to merely 15 seats this year. Sadr’s Sairoon coalition, meanwhile, emerged as the biggest winner, upping its tally from 54 seats to 73 seats. Sadr is now a kingmaker in the formation of Iraq’s next parliament...

Democracy & Governance

Sudanese General Blew Off Final U.S. Effort to Avert Power Grab - Foreign Policy

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

News Type: USIP in the News

Jeffrey Feltman’s plane took off in the early hours of Monday morning after a frantic weekend of high-stakes diplomatic meetings in Sudan. Feltman, U.S. President Joe Biden’s special envoy for the Horn of Africa, was in Khartoum meeting with top Sudanese power brokers to try to shore up the country’s shaky transitional government and try to salvage its uneven path to democracy...

Civilian-Military Relations