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ID085834
Title ProperPakistan between Central and South Asia RSC
LanguageENG
AuthorPriego, Alberto
Publication2008.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The strategic gap between India and Pakistan compels Islamabad to pay attention to its northern dimension, namely Afghanistan and Central Asia. For this reason, in order to avoid being threatened from the North and the South at the same time, Pakistan has always tried to get a friendly government in Afghanistan. During the 1980s and the 1990s a series of events, such as the invasion of Afghanistan, the involvement of Pakistan in the conflict and then the emergence of War on Terror, have changed dramatically the regional situation. At the end of the 1990s there were two separate Regional Security Complexes, the Central and the South Asian ones, divided by Afghanistan, an insulator state. At present, we see how these two Regional Security Complexes have converged in a common point-Afghanistan-which is the hub of a new Regional Security Complex (South-Central Asian RSC) involving these two regions.
`In' analytical NoteCentral Asia and the Caucasus Vol., No.54; 2008: p55-73
Journal SourceCentral Asia and the Caucasus Vol., No.54; 2008: p55-73
Key WordsPakistan ;  Central Asia ;  South Asia ;  Regional Security Complex ;  Security Problems ;  Islam Radicalism