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Crafing Cooperation: Regional International Institutions in Comparative Perspective, Amitav Acharya and Alastair Iain Johnston. Cambridge University Press, 2007


Regional institutions are an increasingly prominent feature of world politics, their characteristics and performance vary widely: some are highly legalistic and bureaucratic, while other are informal and flexible. They also differ in terms of inclusiveness, decision-making rules, and commitment to the non-interference principle. This is the first book to offer a conceptual framework for comparing the design and effectiveness of regional international institutions, including the EU,, NATO, ASEAN, the OAS, the AU and the Arab League. The case studies, by a group of leading scholars of regional institutions, offer a rigorous, historically informed analysis of the differences and similarities in institutions across Europe, Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. The chapters provide a more theoretically and empirically diverse analysis of the design and efficacy of regional institutions than heretofore available.

This book is the outcome of collaboration between the Harvard University Asia Center, the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard, and the Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies (IDSS; now the Rajaratnam School of International Studies_ at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. The Asia Center at Harvard offered a fellowship to Acharya during 2000-2001 to facilitate his collaboration with Johnston and generously offered seed funding for the project. The Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies hosted Johnston during 2003 and organized the second project workshop in Singapore during 2004. The Weatherhead Center for International Affairs hosted the first project workshop in Cambridge, Massachusetts in February 2002, and hosted to Acharya during 2004 to work on the project. We are especially grateful to directors Ezra Vogel and Bill Kirby at the Asia Center, director Barry Desker at IDSS, and director and contributor Jorge Dominguez at the Weatherhead Center for their enthusiastic and consistent backing for the project. We also acknowledge a grant from the Lee Foundation, a private organization in Singapore, in support of the project. We thank Jeff Checkel, a contributor, in taking the initiative in organizing a panel discussion on the project at the American Political Science Association 2004 annual convention in Philadelphia. The editors would also like to thanks Andrew Hurrell of Oxford, Greg mills of the South African Institute of International Affairs, and Andrew Kydd of Harvard for their comments on the theme of the volume during the Singapore workshop, Tan Ban Seng, Deborah Lim, Karyn Wang, and especially Herbert Lin of IDSS for providing organizational and editorial assistance, and John Haslam and Carrie Check of the Cambridge University Press for advice and help in guiding the manuscript review process and its publication as an edited volume.

 


Social Resilience in Singapore: Reflections from the London Bombings, Norman Vasu. Select Publishing, 2007


In the wake of terrorist attacks including the London Bombings on 7 July 2005, the notion of resilience is receiving increased attention from social scientists. Based on the Latin word resilire - meaning to jump back or recoil - the phenomenon has been applied to the study of societies' reactions to exogenous or endogenous shocks. Using the London bombings as the impetus for reflection, Social Resilience in Singapore: Reflections from the London Bombings considers the concepts of social resilience in a time where terrorist actions are calculated not just to do damage and cause harm but also to rupture the social fabric of pluralistic societies.



The Role of Knowledge Communities in Constructing Asia-Pacific Security: How Thought and Talk Make War and Peace, Tan See Seng. The Edwin Mellen Press, 2007


This present study is an effort to address the dearth of critical and/or post-positivist perspectives in security studies of and about the Asia-Pacific region. It demonstrates how regional communities of security specialists and intellectuals, including knowledge communities such as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations – Institute of Strategic and International Studies and the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific, have contributed to just such a state-centric, political image at the expense of alternative ideas and, in so doing, have promoted and legitimized their own identities as authorities on regional security. This work shows how post-positivist analysis, contrary to what its many detractors may think, is neither prolix nor self-indulgent. Rather, it invites critical reflection on the conditions that produce particular ‘urgent questions’ (albeit at the expense of other questions) of about international relations, such as the question of Asia-Pacific regional security.


Sejarah Bank Indonesia, J. Soedradjad Djiwandono. Bank Indonesia, 2007


Period 5 :
1997-1999, Bank Indonesia during the Economic, Monetary and Banking Crisis.

 

 





Seeing the Invisible: National Security Intelligence in an Uncertain Age, Thomas Quiggin. World Scientific, 2007


Intelligence is critical to ensuring national security, especially with asymmetric threats making up most of the new challenges. Knowledge, rather than power, is the only weapon that can prevail in a complex and uncertain environment awash with asymmetric threats, some known, many currently unknown. This book shows how such a changing national security environment has had profound implications for the strategic intelligence requirements of states in the 21st century. The book shows up the fallacy underlying the age-old assumption that intelligence agencies must do a better job of connecting the dots and avoiding future failures. It argues that this cannot and will not happen for a variety of reasons. Instead of seeking to predict discrete future events, the strategic intelligence community must focus rather on risk-based anticipatory warnings concerning the nature and impact of a range of potential threats. In this respect, the book argues for a full and creative exploitation of technology to support - but not supplant - the work of the strategic intelligence community, and illustrates this ideal with reference to Singapore's path-breaking Risk Assessment and Horizon Scanning (RAHS) program.


Coalition Operations in the Age of US Military Primacy, Paul T. Mitchell. The International Institute for Strategic Studies, 2007


Since its emergence in 1998, the concept of Network Centric Warfare (NCW) has become a central driver behind America's military 'transformation' and seems to offer the possibility of true integration between multinational military formations.  Even though NCW, or variations on its themes, has been adopted by many armed services, it is a concept in operational and doctrinal development. It is shaping not only how militaries operate, but, just as importantly, what they are operating with, and potentially altering the strategic landscape. 

This paper examines how the current military dominance of the US over every other state means that only it has the capacity to sustain military activity on a global scale and that other states participating in US-led coalitions must be prepared to work in an 'interoperable' fashion.  It explores the application of computer networks to military operations in conjunction with the need to secure a network's information and to assure that it accurately represents situational reality. Drawing on an examination of how networks affected naval operations in the Persian Gulf during 2002 and 2003 as conducted by America's Australian and Canadian coalition partners, the paper warns that in seeking allies with the requisite technological capabilities, but also those that it can trust with its information resources, the US may be heading into a very secure digital corner.


Transforming the US Military: Implications for the Asia–Pacific. Richard A. Bitzinger, 2006


Under the stewardship of Defense Secretary Rumsfield, transformation has become the guiding principle of the US military.

Ongoing developments and breakthroughs in such areas as intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, precision-strike, stealth technologies and command and control have made the US military the most formidable armed force in the world.

One result of this transformation process is a significant change in the US military force posture, particularly overseas. As flexibility, agility and mobility become more important requirements, maintaining large numbers of US soldiers around the globe has become less imperative.

Overseas bases, while perhaps becoming fewer and smaller, more austere and more impermanent, will be increasingly valued as forward staging areas for expeditionary operations. The US military will likely come to rely even more than ever on its allies and partnering states.

Defence transformation, has major implications for the future course of US military and security policy, particularly when it comes to the Asia–Pacific region. As the US continues to transform its forces, this process will have a profound impact on the ways in which US forces operate in the region, including their future basing and deployment, where and how they’ll operate, and what kind of and what kind of equipment they’ll require.

The report examines how US defence transformation affects the leading nations and militaries in the Asia–Pacific region, and how those countries and their armed forces are responding to a transforming US military. This two-way dynamic will have repercussions for regional security that will be felt for many years to come.

US defence transformation will affect a number of critical regional security concerns, such as alliance relationships and interoperability, regional competition and cooperation, and local force modernisation activities.

US forces in the Asia-Pacific region are undergoing significant changes in terms of force structure, roles and missions and operating concepts. These are developments that countries like Australia should continue to monitor closely and to which they should react cautiously.


Sejarah Bank Indonesia, J. Soedradjad Djiwandono. Bank Indonesia, 2006

Period 4 :
1983-1997. Bank Indonesia during the period of economic development with deregulation.

 

 

Period 3 :
1966-1983. Bank Indonesia during the period of stabilization, rehabilitation and economic development.

 

 

 


Muslim Resistance in Southern Thailand and Southern Philippines: Religion, Ideology, and Politics, Joseph Chinyong Liow. Washington, D.C.: East-West Center Washington, 2006


This study analyzes the ongoing conflicts in southern Thailand and southern Philippines between indigenous Muslim minorities and their respective central governments. In particular, it investigates and interrogates the ideological context and content of conflicts in southern Thailand and southern Philippines insofar as they pertain to Islam and radicalism in order to assess the extent to which these conflicts have taken on a greater religious character and the implications this might have on our understanding of them. In the main, the monograph argues that while conflicts in southern Thailand and southern Philippines have taken on religious hues as a consequence of both local and external factors, on present evidence they share little with broader radical global Islamist and Jihadist ideologies and movements, and their contents and contexts remain primarily political, reflected in the key objective of some measure of self-determination, and local, in terms of the territorial and ideational boundaries of activism and agitation. Furthermore, though both conflicts appear on the surface to be driven by similar dynamics and mirror each other, they are different in several fundamental ways. - Suicide or Martyrdom Operation
- Killing Civilians and Non-combatants

The third part contains statements of Muslim condemnation of Bali bombing and similar acts of terrorism for readers' reference.


Unlicensed to Kill: Countering Imam Samudra's Justification for the Bali Bombing, Muhammad Haniff Bin Hassan. Peace Matters, 2006

The book is divided into three parts. The first part provides a brief introduction to Imam Samudra and the incident of Bali bombing I. It then maps out Imam Samudra's thinking behind Bali bombing I as written in his book Aku Melawan Teroris.

The second part points out and provides alternative viewpoints to the following issues contained in Imam Samudra's book:
- The idea of jihad as perpetual war between Muslims and non-Muslim
- All non-Muslims are in conspiracy against Islam and Muslims
- Jihad as the means for championing the cause of Islam
- The Ruling of Jihad: Fadhu Ain and Fardhu Kifayah
- Is Bali a Place For Armed Jihad?
- Can Place of Vices Be Bombed?
- Robbery/Theft in the Name of Jihad
- Suicide or Martyrdom Operation
- Killing Civilians and Non-combatants


The third part contains statements of Muslim condemnation of Bali bombing and similar acts of terrorism for readers' reference.


The Evolving Maritime Balance of Power in the Asia-Pacific: Maritime Doctrines and Nuclear Weapons at Sea, Lawrence W Prabhakar, Joshua Ho, Sam Bateman. World Scientific, 2006


The Asia-Pacific has emerged as the hub of global geo-political, geo-economic and geo-strategic significance in the post-Cold War period. The rise of China and the resurgence of India will be the hallmark for the next 50 years. How this surge in power is accommodated by the incumbent powers like the United States and Japan, and how the new regional powers like China and India manage the power politics that emerge will be key determinants of regional stability.


This volume examines the national maritime doctrines as well as the nuclear weapons developments at sea of the four major powers in the Asia-Pacific, namely, China, India, Japan and the United States, to see if the evolving dynamic is a cooperative or a competitive one. In particular, the volume looks at the evolving paradigms of maritime transformation in strategy and technology, the emergent new maritime doctrines and evolving force postures in the naval orders of battle, the role and operations of nuclear navies in the Asia-Pacific, and the implications and impact of nuclear weapons, ballistic missiles and sea based missile defence responses in the region.

The world's maritime future is likely to be determined in large measure in the Asia-Pacific, particularly by the developing relationship between the four major maritime powers of the area, China, India, Japan and the US. This relationship, in turn, will be decided by the way in which they react to each other's naval policies and programmes and to how they respond, individually and collectively, to strategic developments in the area. In this important book, some of the world's leading rnaritime analysts begin the task of exploring a topic crucial for the world's future.

Professor Geoffrey fill
Author of Seapower: A Guide for the Twenty-First Century

"East Asia and the Pacific Rim are likely to be to the Twenty-First Century what Europe and the Atlantic Rim were to the Twentieth: the main locus of economic growth and thus the center of considerable potential conflict. This book looks in depth at how the four largest actors in the area, the United States, China, Japan, and India, are developing their naval power to act in this essentially maritime theater of future operations."

Norman Friedman
Author of Seapower and Strategy


Can we Meet the Threat of Global Violence, Michael Chandler and Rohan Gunaratna. Reaktion Books, 2006


Long before the devastating events of 11th September 2001 many countries had developed ways to deal with terrorists, but for the most part these groups were regarded as only domestic threats. The actions of the “Atta Group” on 9/11, however, not only destroyed the World Trade Centre but also blew away forever these attitudes of complacency. The horror and enormity of the attacks on such iconic targets prompted an unprecedented response from across the globe.

Countering Terrorism: Can We Meet the Treat of Global Violence? is a hard-hitting examination of responses to terrorism around the globe, looking not only at 9/11 but also the London and Madrid bombings, as well as terrorist activity in Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Palestine and elsewhere. The authors argue that despite the international community being presented with a prime opportunity to cooperate and collaborate against trans-national terrorism, the opportunity has been missed, long-term visionary policies have been held hostage to short-term political expediency, and what should have been a watershed has become a trickle in the sand.

The authors’ collective experience—dealing with a wide range of terrorist activity, security issues and conflict situations—spans over forty years, and includes first-hand exposure in the field. Together they bring their specialist knowledge to bear on one of the most critical issues of today, offering a clear-sighted way of understanding and dealing with global terrorism.


Realpolitik Ideology: Indonesia's Use of Military Force, Leonard C. Sebastian. ISEAS, 2006


Realpolitik Ideology presents path-breaking on the Indonesian military (TNI) going beyond traditional scholarship on the TNI’s dual function or dwifungsi which has been one of the dominating fields of analysis in Indonesian studies since the 1970s. Addressed to political scientists, sociologists, historians, anthropologists and defence practitioners, this book interprets security policy in terms of its social roots asserting that the realpolitik behaviour of the TNI has strong "socio-cultural" undertones, which in turn shape the development of military doctrine. The argument made in the book is that only through a better understanding of the doctrines that reinforced the military's significant presence in Indonesian affairs and their subsequent restructuring can Indonesia's policy-makers attempt meaningful reform of the TNI.

Readable, accessible and yet exhaustively researched, this book examines the origins and development of ideas on security from the point of view of the TNI and explains why civil-military relations are still fraught with uncertainty, and why the recent changes in military ideology, removal of military posts in the legislature, ongoing divestment of its business, and other measures still do not guarantee that the military will not intervene in the affairs of state.


Human Security and the UN: A Critical History, S Neil MacFarlane and Yuen Foong Khong. Indiana University Press, 2006


This project is undertaken as part of The United Nations Intellectual History Project (UNIHP), which seeks to trace the origin and analyse the evolution of key ideas and concepts about international economic and social development born or nurtured under UN auspices.

How did the individual human being become the focus of the contemporary discourse on security? What was the role of the United Nations in "securing" the individual? What are the payoffs and costs of this extension of the concept? Neil MacFarlane and Yuen Foong Khong tackle these questions by analyzing historical and contemporary debates about what is to be secured. From Westphalia through the 19th century, the state's claim to be the object of security was sustainable because it offered its subjects some measure of protection. The state's ability to provide security for its citizens came under heavy strain in the 20th century as a result of technological, strategic, and ideological innovations. By the end of World War II, efforts to reclaim the security rights of individuals gathered pace, as seen in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and a host of United Nations covenants and conventions. MacFarlane and Khong highlight the UN's work in promoting human security ideas since the 1940s, giving special emphasis to its role in extending the notion of security to include development, economic, environmental, and other issues in the 1990s.


Chinese Civil-Military Relations The Transformation of the People’s Liberation Army, Li Nan. Routledge, 2006

Chinese Civil-Military Relations addresses three key issues: What has changed in Chinese civil-military relations? What can account for these changes? And what are the implications for Chinese security policy and strategic behavior?

It tackles these questions by assessing civil-military dynamics in elite politics; such dynamics in national security and arms control policy; relations between commanders and political commissars; relations between PLA and society; civil-military dynamics regarding defense economics and logistics; and such dynamics regarding dual-use technologies and defense industry. These analyses show that the emphasis of Chinese civil-military relations has now shifted from politics to military tasks and what the possible implications of China’s military modernization drive are for security in the Asia-Pacific region.


Order and Security in Southeast Asia : Essays in memory of Michael Leifer, Joseph Chingyong Liow and Ralf Emmers. Routledge, 2006

Michael Leifer, who died in 2001, was one of the leading scholars of Southeast Asian international relations. He was hugely influential through his extensive writings and his contacts with people in academia, government and business in the region. He also inspired many students from Southeast Asia and beyond, an impressively large number of whom are now reading figures in their own right. This book of essays, compiled by two of Michael Leifer’s last PhD students, explores and reflects on the key themes of his work on Southeast Asia.




From Isfahan to Ayutthaya: Contacts between Iran and Siam in the 17th Century, Christoph Marcinkowski. Pustaka Nasional, 2005


This book traces back the roots of the first Iranian immigrants to Thailand whose descendants – among them the Bunnag family which features a Buddhist as well as a Shi’ite Muslim branch – continue to enjoy social prestige and influence in the kingdom today. Utilizing parts of a unique 17th-century Persian travel account written by the secretary of an Iranian mission to Siam and other works by European explorers, Marcinkowski unfolds the influences and impacts resulting from extensive diplomatic as well as cultural Iranian-Siamese contacts and the visible effects in present-day Thailand. From their imperial capital Isfahan, the shahs of Iran’s Shi’ite Safavid dynasty (r. 1501-1722) encouraged contacts with the non-Muslim world. This curiosity was shared by the Siamese king Narai the Great (r. 1656-88). His tolerant rule encouraged merchants from Europe and various Asian countries to settle down at his flourishing royal capital Ayutthaya, which became known among foreign mariners under the Persian epithet Shahr-e N_v, “City of Boats”. From Isfahan to Ayutthaya focuses in particular on the community of Shi’ite Iranian merchants in Siam and the creation of the office of Shaykh of Islam or “head of the Muslim community” which is still extant in the kingdom and known in Thai as chularajmontri. Marcinkowski also briefly touches upon the spread of Islam in the region.

Reviews
“ This is accordingly a fairly brief but nevertheless meaty monograph on an intriguing topic. Dr Marcinkowski deserves praise for bringing it into the light of critical scholarship […] and the Singapore publishers deserve praise for producing an attractive book […].”


Professor emer. Clifford Edmund Bosworth,
Fellow of the British Academy
Journal of Islamic Studies (Oxford, UK)


“ Accolades are to be given to Marcinkowski for his work in dealing with what is by no means an ephemeral Iranian-Siamese relationship.”


Dr Walter Strach,
National University of Singapore,
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Singapore)

“ Marcinkowski’s study serves as an excellent introduction to […] this period of history.”


Dr George Lane, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London,
Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (Cambridge, UK)


Transition Politics In Southeast Asia, Yang Razali Kassim. Marshall Cavendish, 2005

This book looks at the politics of leadership change and succession in Indonesia and Malaysia, two countries which experienced the worst political fallouts from the Asian financial crisis. A former journalist who has had the advantage of covering these two countries over two decades, the author begins with an overview of political transitions in Southeast Asia. The central focus of the book, however, covers developments in Indonesia and Malaysia through the tumultuous years up to the end of 2004.
The book’s underlying thesis is that the major leadership changes in Indonesia and Malaysia in recent years have not been, and are not taking place in isolation, but are in fact part of a long process of change that can be traced to the 1980s. Although the two primary political actors – Suharto and Mahathir – are out of office, they remain, in terms of impact, very much in the consciousness of the successor generation because of the defining roles that they had played and the political legacies that they left behind. TRANSITION POLITICS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA provides a timely narration of the twists and turns of the ‘politics of transition’ in Indonesia and Malaysia over a span of two decades. It also serves as a relevant backdrop to understanding the context and genesis of the political events that currently dominate the news and the landscapes in the two states. The result is a sense of contrast in how the two countries grappled with the common quest for effective leadership in the face of the demanding challenge of providing security, stability, economic development and progress.


Middle Powers and Accidental Wars - A Study in Conventional Strategic Stability, Bernard Loo Fook Weng. Edwin Mellen, 2005

The traditional understanding of strategic stability, as a condition wherein adversarial states refrain from waging a strategic war, is in the first place flawed as it conflates the concept with the wider issue of causes of war, it places too great an emphasis on arms racing and crisis management, and it has focused too much on nuclear strategy. This study situates the concept directly with the phenomena of accidental or inadvertent wars, and proposes an understanding of strategic stability as a condition wherein policy-makers do not feel pressured into knee-jerk decisions concerning the use of military force. This study proposes a framework of conventional strategic stability. It includes a geographic and strategic cultural milieu that frames the processes by which policy-makers and strategic planners identify and assess the threat posed by potential adversaries. It directs attention away from armaments to other military-strategic factors such as interpretations of strategic doctrines and intelligence and early warning processes. Finally, drawing from the Clausewitzian politics-war paradigm, it focuses on how domestic and external political conditions provide clues as to how and why strategic stability either maintains or fails, because decisions for war are ultimately political in nature.


UN Peace Operations and Asian Security, Mely Caballero-Anthony and Amitav Acharya. Routledge, 2005

UN Peace Operations and Asian Security provides an unparalleled analysis of the state of the United Nations peace operations and its impact on Asian security. It examines new strategies being adopted by the UN, including doctrinal shifts in peace operation, and assesses the division of labour between the UN, regional organisation and non-governmental organisations / actors.
Based on selected papers from mostly Asian scholars, the book offers regional perspectives from the south, southeast and Northeast Asia on the changing nature of UN Peace operations and analyses some of the core issues that are of critical relevance to regional security in Asia. In addition it reveals interesting new insights on the new players in the area of peace operations i.e. China and Japan, and considers their projected roles as defined by their respective security concepts. It also delves into issues of possible areas of concern caused by the new activism of these regional powers in peace operations. Finally, the book revisits the significant lessons learnt from the UN experience in Cambodia and East Timor and examines their impact on future directions of peace operations.
This was first published as a special issue of International Peacekeeping.


The Making of a Terrorist: Recruitment, Training and Root Causes, Vol.I – III, Contributors: Arabinda Acharya, Adam Dolnik, Rohan Gunaratna, Kumar Ramakrishna, Edited by James J.F. Forest. Praeger Security International, 2005

Global terrorism has become a frightening reality, and the situation calls for greater engagement with the public, as the necessary eyes and ears of the global anti-terrorism coalition. However, to be effective the public must be equipped with the knowledge of how, why and where an individual becomes a terrorist. This is the primary goal of this set, which seeks to answer one central question: What do we currently know about the transformation through which an individual becomes a terrorist?
The current body of research on terrorism suggests that a combination of factors will, in most cases, result in some form of terrorism. This combination differs widely by region, and at minimum involves motivations, opportunities, contexts, processes, personal disposition, and preparation.
Vol.I deals with recruitment means and methods, and includes discussions of psychological, social, ideological, and religious dimensions of recruitment. Vol.II addresses the training of terrorists, including teaching tools and training manuals, and it includes fascinating case studies from Al Qaeda Hezbollah, Aum Shinrikyo, Christian militias and other groups. Vol.III is devoted to root causes, including their political, religious and socioeconomic dimensions. Appendices to these volumes feature profiles of terrorist organizations, samples of terrorist training manuals and recommended resources for the study of terrorism.


Bank Indonesia and the Crisis: An Insider’s View, J. Soedradjad Djiwandono. ISEAS, 2005

This important book is set to be a key document for those interested in Indonesia’s recent economic and political history. There have been many unanswered questions about exactly how the regional currency crisis snowballed into a full-scale banking crisis in Indonesia, coupled with a total loss of credibility within a short time. This record by the official in the midst of the banking crisis, the ex-governor of Bank Indonesia, gives a fuller and intriguing picture of the events, including the actions of President Soeharto, as well as a balanced account of the much criticised interventions by the International Monetary Fund. The author also analyses the lessons for monetary policy to avoid future such crisis.
This is essential reading for economists and Indonesia waches.


Conflict and Terrorism in Southern Thailand, Rohan Gunaratna, Arabinda Acharya, Sabrina Chua. Marshall Cavendish, 2005.

Unlike the Cold War era, regional conflicts today have profound international implications. Enhanced communication – flow of ideas, inexpensive travel, greater mobility of people, unregulated flow of finance, and a saturated arms market – have dramatically increased the globalization of violence. With internal displacement and refugee flows, most armed conflicts assume regional and international dimensions. With time, most become intractable, Therefore, it is imperative to resolve conflict in its formative phase

The resolution of the conflict in Thailand rests neither in counter-terrorism nor in counter-insurgency. The right combination of measures – ranging from developing intelligence dominance, carrying out intelligence-led operations, forging a special relationship with Malaysia, co-opting the Muslim elites, and instituting good governance, particularly, farsighted leadership – is critical to manage and terminate the threat.


Regional Security In Southeast Asia Beyond the ASEAN Way, Mely Caballero-Anthony. ISEAS, 2005

The book examines ASEAN’s mechanisms in managing challenges and threats to regional security. Its extensive analyses of the ASEAN story of managing regional security cover the different phases of ASEAN’s development as a regional organization and explore the perceptible changes that have occurred in regional mechanisms of conflict management. The book also examines the roles of relevant actors beyond the states of ASEAN and the key interactions that have evolved over time which have been instrumental in moving regional mechanisms beyond the ASEAN way.

The book argues that the ASEAN way has not been impervious to change. As the association finds its way through periods of crises and continues to confront the many challenges ahead, ASEAN and its mechanisms are already being transformed beyond the narrow confines of the modalities associated with the ASEAN way. The changes in the political and security landscape of the region, as well as the democratic transitions taking place in some member states, have set the stage for a much more dynamic set of regional actors and processes that bring into question the kind of regionalism that is now taking place in the region. This book therefore attempts to capture these evolving dynamics and examines the way regionalism is changing in Southeast Asia.


Religion and Politics in Iraq. Shi‘ite Clerics between Quietism and Resistance, Christoph Marcinkowski. Pustaka Nasional, 2004


Religion and Politics in Iraq recounts the major steps in the relationship between the various Sunnite-dominated governments on the one hand and Shi’ite leadership and population on the other in what is now Iraq, from the late Ottoman period until the end of the rule of Saddam Husayn. From the end of the 19th century, Iraq, witnessed the Ottomans, the installation of a foreign-backed monarchy, as well as several brands of republican regimes.

The main thesis of this book is that Iraqi Twelver Shi’ism – the dominant denomination in Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, and Bahrain, with large minorities in several other Arab Gulf countries and on the Indian subcontinent – is essentially quietist and politically non-assertive. For centuries, it had been dominated by its clerics, based on the seminaries at the country’s Shi’ite shrine cities. It had been the brutality of the Baath regime and – from the perspective of classical Shi’ite thought - deviant interpretations of the nature of the relations between the state and religion in neighbouring Iran that had led to a radicalization of segments of the Iraqi Shi’ite “lay” people. This has resulted in the erosion of traditional Shi’ite leadership in the aftermath of the 2003 liberation of the country. The author argues that it would be crucial for the seminaries and scholars at Najaf to reassert their authority over the faithful in order to achieve some degree of future political stability for Iraq.

As classical Shi’ite Islamic thought does not ascribe to any particular political system or “theory of government”, quietist Iraqi Shi’ism - within the setting of a secular and multi-denominational political order - could thus become a viable alternative to the “Khomeinist model”, a model that is aiming at political domination of the Middle East by Iran.

Review 
“ The appearance of Dr Marcinkowski’s book […] is […] extremely timely. It provides a concise yet authoritative introduction to the history of political involvement by the Shiite ulama of Iraq and the choices they have made in a succession of turbulent and challenging circumstances. Comprehension of the current situation is, indeed, impossible without some knowledge of this history for virtually every element of what is now underway in Iraq is reminiscent of earlier times: the disruptive effects of foreign occupation,; divergence of opinion and strategy among the Shiite religious leaders; and complex relations with neighbouring Iran and its religious establishment. […] Having established already a solid reputation as an energetic and talented scholar of the history of Shiism in Iran, Dr Marcinkowski is indeed well qualified to venture onto the neighboring territory of Iraq. He is to be commended for having done so and congratulated on the result. ”


Professor Hamid Algar,
Professor of Islamic Studies and Persian,
University of California at Berkeley, United States,
From his foreword to Religion and Politics in Iraq


Asia-Pacific Security Cooperation, National Interest and Regional Order, See Seng Tan and Amitav Acharya (eds.). M.E. Sharpe, 2004

New developments in the Asia-Pacific region call for a review of our current understanding of the security order there. These developments are forcing regional elities to rethink and alter, in varying degrees, the way they manage security issues. Against this backdrop of regional transition, contributors to this volume explore the following: bilateral security cooperation and emerging mutlilateral structures; factors needed to develop complementary relationships between states; and why some forms of security cooperation and institutionalization in the Asia-Pacific have proved more feasible than others. The first section of the book provides an overview of evolving security approaches in the Asia-Pacific region. Part II of the book represents country-based perspectives on how nine nations in the region have evolved in their thinking and approach to security management from the Cold War to the present, including their responses to nontraditional security challenges such as terrorism.

 

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