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GCSP’s second generation: the challenges ahead, at the time of the "New Normal". A fellows’ perspective.
25 years mark a generation.
Imagining UN Peace Operations 2030: Adaptation, Revolutionary Reform or Something All-Together-New?
New international realities are emerging.
As the conflict in Syria approaches its tenth anniversary, a holistic political settlement encompassing the entirety of the country is unlikely in the near to medium term.
With presidential elections in the United States underway in November 2020[1]
Alumnus of our 2019 PVE course (Preventing Violent Extremism) takes action in Mali to avoid recruitment of youth by jihadist groups and leads the establishment of two new youth training and community centres.
Below are extracts from a piece by the GCSP’s Altea Rossi entitled “Training Armed Forces in IHL: Just a Matter of Law?” that was published by Opinio Juris on 8 October 2020.
The Syrian National Army (SNA) is officially part of the Syrian Interim Government (SIG) and responds to the Ministry of Defense (MoD). Abdurrahman Mustafa, the President of the SIG, and Selim Idris, the Minister of Defense, oversee the SNA.
The town and province of Daraa in southwest Syria is known for being a “cradle of the Syrian revolution”.
On 30 December 2017, the Syrian Interim Government (SIG) announced the establishment of the Syrian National Army (SNA).
In Idlib, armed groups can be categorized under three conglomerates: Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the Syrian National Army (SNA), and radicals led by Hurras al-Deen (HaD). Among these three anti-government groups, HTS is the strongest one.