Professor Amin Saikal (born 2 December 1950 in Kabul, Afghanistan) is the Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies (The Middle East & Central Asia) and Professor of Political Science at the Australian National University. Professor Saikal has specialised in the politics, history, political economy and international relations of the Middle East and Central Asia. He has been a Visiting Fellow at Princeton University, Cambridge University and the Institute of Development Studies (University of Sussex), as well as a Rockefeller Foundation Fellow in International Relations (1983-1988). He is a member of many national and international academic organisations. He is also a frequent commentator on radio and television.
Professor Saikal has also published numerous articles in international journals, as well as many feature articles in major international newspapers, including the International Herald Tribune, The New York Times and The Guardian.
Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Professor Amin Saikal, Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies at The Australian National University gives this public lecture: 'Egypt: Mubarek's...
28:58
In Conversation: Prof Bob Bowker and Prof Amin Saikal AM
In Conversation: Prof Bob Bowker and Prof Amin Saikal AM
In Conversation: Prof Bob Bowker and Prof Amin Saikal AM
Prof Bob Bowker sits down with Prof Amin Saikal to discuss the publication of his new book, entitled 'American Democracy Promotion in the Middle East: From B...
66:51
Professor Amin Saikal AM: Afghanistan on the brink
Professor Amin Saikal AM: Afghanistan on the brink
Professor Amin Saikal AM: Afghanistan on the brink
Professor Amin Saikal AM fom the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies ANU gives a public lecture on 'Afghanistan on the brink'. Afghanistan is in a state of c...
62:21
Professor Amin Saikal AM
Professor Amin Saikal AM
Professor Amin Saikal AM
Iran and The West: Clashes of Interests and Perceptions.
48:26
KANKASH: Beyond 2014 - Interview with Amin Saikal
KANKASH: Beyond 2014 - Interview with Amin Saikal
KANKASH: Beyond 2014 - Interview with Amin Saikal
2:17
Amin Saikal
Amin Saikal
Amin Saikal
amin saikal wiki amin saikal amin saikal anu amin saikal contact amin saikal email amin saikal afghanistan.
20:26
Prof. Amin Saikal: The Changing Political and Strategic Environment in West Asia
Prof. Amin Saikal: The Changing Political and Strategic Environment in West Asia
Prof. Amin Saikal: The Changing Political and Strategic Environment in West Asia
The Asian Security Conference (ASC) is a major calendar event of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi which is organized in early...
10:13
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
30:57
Major General John Cantwell: Exit Wounds
Major General John Cantwell: Exit Wounds
Major General John Cantwell: Exit Wounds
Major General John Cantwell discusses his book Exit Wounds, a searing story of the realities of Australia's recent wars and the enduring scars they leave on ...
4:02
Extended interview: What to expect from the Iranian election
Extended interview: What to expect from the Iranian election
Extended interview: What to expect from the Iranian election
ANU Professor and Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, Amin Saikal, tells SBS his predictions for this year's Iranian election. Watch World N...
5:31
APW14: Q & Asia
APW14: Q & Asia
APW14: Q & Asia
The delegates of Asia Pacific Week 2014 discuss questions of power in the context of the growing states in the Asia-Pacific, with some of the nation's leadin...
69:02
Iran at the Crossroads: A New Direction?
Iran at the Crossroads: A New Direction?
Iran at the Crossroads: A New Direction?
LISD High-tea Talk by Professor Amin Saikal
3:34
Karzai Is Not Defying the West ? - Afghanistan
Karzai Is Not Defying the West ? - Afghanistan
Karzai Is Not Defying the West ? - Afghanistan
Professor Amin Saikal talks to SBS news on 17th Nov 08. Hamid Karzai has supposedly dared the international community to stop him negotiating with the Taliba...
60:13
What next for the US in Syria? - Postgraduate information evening 15/10/13
What next for the US in Syria? - Postgraduate information evening 15/10/13
What next for the US in Syria? - Postgraduate information evening 15/10/13
A panel discussion on what's next for the US in Syria as part of the Centre's postgraduate information evening. Panel featuring Professor Amin Saikal, Direct...
Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Professor Amin Saikal, Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies at The Australian National University gives this public lecture: 'Egypt: Mubarek's...
28:58
In Conversation: Prof Bob Bowker and Prof Amin Saikal AM
In Conversation: Prof Bob Bowker and Prof Amin Saikal AM
In Conversation: Prof Bob Bowker and Prof Amin Saikal AM
Prof Bob Bowker sits down with Prof Amin Saikal to discuss the publication of his new book, entitled 'American Democracy Promotion in the Middle East: From B...
66:51
Professor Amin Saikal AM: Afghanistan on the brink
Professor Amin Saikal AM: Afghanistan on the brink
Professor Amin Saikal AM: Afghanistan on the brink
Professor Amin Saikal AM fom the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies ANU gives a public lecture on 'Afghanistan on the brink'. Afghanistan is in a state of c...
62:21
Professor Amin Saikal AM
Professor Amin Saikal AM
Professor Amin Saikal AM
Iran and The West: Clashes of Interests and Perceptions.
48:26
KANKASH: Beyond 2014 - Interview with Amin Saikal
KANKASH: Beyond 2014 - Interview with Amin Saikal
KANKASH: Beyond 2014 - Interview with Amin Saikal
2:17
Amin Saikal
Amin Saikal
Amin Saikal
amin saikal wiki amin saikal amin saikal anu amin saikal contact amin saikal email amin saikal afghanistan.
20:26
Prof. Amin Saikal: The Changing Political and Strategic Environment in West Asia
Prof. Amin Saikal: The Changing Political and Strategic Environment in West Asia
Prof. Amin Saikal: The Changing Political and Strategic Environment in West Asia
The Asian Security Conference (ASC) is a major calendar event of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi which is organized in early...
10:13
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
30:57
Major General John Cantwell: Exit Wounds
Major General John Cantwell: Exit Wounds
Major General John Cantwell: Exit Wounds
Major General John Cantwell discusses his book Exit Wounds, a searing story of the realities of Australia's recent wars and the enduring scars they leave on ...
4:02
Extended interview: What to expect from the Iranian election
Extended interview: What to expect from the Iranian election
Extended interview: What to expect from the Iranian election
ANU Professor and Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, Amin Saikal, tells SBS his predictions for this year's Iranian election. Watch World N...
5:31
APW14: Q & Asia
APW14: Q & Asia
APW14: Q & Asia
The delegates of Asia Pacific Week 2014 discuss questions of power in the context of the growing states in the Asia-Pacific, with some of the nation's leadin...
69:02
Iran at the Crossroads: A New Direction?
Iran at the Crossroads: A New Direction?
Iran at the Crossroads: A New Direction?
LISD High-tea Talk by Professor Amin Saikal
3:34
Karzai Is Not Defying the West ? - Afghanistan
Karzai Is Not Defying the West ? - Afghanistan
Karzai Is Not Defying the West ? - Afghanistan
Professor Amin Saikal talks to SBS news on 17th Nov 08. Hamid Karzai has supposedly dared the international community to stop him negotiating with the Taliba...
60:13
What next for the US in Syria? - Postgraduate information evening 15/10/13
What next for the US in Syria? - Postgraduate information evening 15/10/13
What next for the US in Syria? - Postgraduate information evening 15/10/13
A panel discussion on what's next for the US in Syria as part of the Centre's postgraduate information evening. Panel featuring Professor Amin Saikal, Direct...
38:06
Is the ‘Islamic State’ vanquishable?
Is the ‘Islamic State’ vanquishable?
Is the ‘Islamic State’ vanquishable?
The rise of the so-called Islamic State (IS) in vast swathes of territories in Syria and Iraq, and the US-led military response to it, have introduced another complex dimension to an oil-rich but already very volatile Middle East. The old correlation of forces in support of maintaining the status quo, especially following the Iranian revolution more than 35 years ago, has been changing.
A set of new alignments and realignments along multiple regional fault-lines, including sectarian divisions and geopolitical rivalries at different levels, has come to redefine the region and possibly change its traditional political and territorial contours.
67:35
Panel - The War in Afghanistan Has Just Begun, Festival of Dangerous Ideas 2012 (Ideas at the House)
Panel - The War in Afghanistan Has Just Begun, Festival of Dangerous Ideas 2012 (Ideas at the House)
Panel - The War in Afghanistan Has Just Begun, Festival of Dangerous Ideas 2012 (Ideas at the House)
As NATO sets an 'irreversible' course out of Afghanistan, President Barack Obama states 'we are now unified behind a plan to responsibly wind down the war in...
81:36
"The Arab Spring": Implications for Australia's National Security
"The Arab Spring": Implications for Australia's National Security
"The Arab Spring": Implications for Australia's National Security
Recent months have seen the people of the Arab world from Yemen to Egypt, and most recently in Libya, seeking to shake off decades of repression and politica...
71:37
China and the Middle East
China and the Middle East
China and the Middle East
Discussions on the relationship between China and the Middle East in light of recent events The Australia-China Youth Association and the ANU Middle East Lea...
4:48
Saudi Arabian Diplomat Defends Yemen Strikes as ‘War of Necessity'
Saudi Arabian Diplomat Defends Yemen Strikes as ‘War of Necessity'
Saudi Arabian Diplomat Defends Yemen Strikes as ‘War of Necessity'
Saudi ambassador to Washington Adel al-Jubeir calls the Saudi-led air campaign against Shi’ite Houthi rebels in Yemen a “war of necessity,” not a proxy war against Iran. Jubeir said that despite an Arab League decision to form a joint Arab intervention force, there are no immediate plans to introduce ground forces in Yemen.
Ambassador Jubeir said an objective of the air campaign is to protect the Yemeni people and government against the Houthis, who he described as a radical organization with ties to Iran and Hezbollah. He also said the Saudi campaign was launched Thursday at the behest of the legitimate Yemeni government of Abd Rabbou Mansu
19:59
Gopichand Jasoos (1982)Comedy - 19 February 1982 (India)
Gopichand Jasoos (1982)Comedy - 19 February 1982 (India)
Gopichand Jasoos (1982)Comedy - 19 February 1982 (India)
St.James Church-Kashmiri Gate - Obituary. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khalistan Prosecution of those responsible for November 1984 Anti-Sikh Pogroms Referre...
14:24
Gopichand Jasoos (1982)Comedy - 19 February 1982 (India)
Gopichand Jasoos (1982)Comedy - 19 February 1982 (India)
Gopichand Jasoos (1982)Comedy - 19 February 1982 (India)
St.James Church-Kashmiri Gate - Obituary. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khalistan Prosecution of those responsible for November 1984 Anti-Sikh Pogroms Referre...
5:22
Mahmoud Saikal on Afghan Transition
Mahmoud Saikal on Afghan Transition
Mahmoud Saikal on Afghan Transition
Mahmoud Saika, the former Afghan Deputy Foreign Minister speaks about the upcoming meeting of the Afghan and US presidents to be held in early January 2013 i...
8:01
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Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Professor Amin Saikal, Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies at The Australian National University gives this public lecture: 'Egypt: Mubarek's...
Professor Amin Saikal, Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies at The Australian National University gives this public lecture: 'Egypt: Mubarek's...
Prof Bob Bowker sits down with Prof Amin Saikal to discuss the publication of his new book, entitled 'American Democracy Promotion in the Middle East: From B...
Prof Bob Bowker sits down with Prof Amin Saikal to discuss the publication of his new book, entitled 'American Democracy Promotion in the Middle East: From B...
Professor Amin Saikal AM fom the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies ANU gives a public lecture on 'Afghanistan on the brink'. Afghanistan is in a state of c...
Professor Amin Saikal AM fom the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies ANU gives a public lecture on 'Afghanistan on the brink'. Afghanistan is in a state of c...
The Asian Security Conference (ASC) is a major calendar event of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi which is organized in early...
The Asian Security Conference (ASC) is a major calendar event of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi which is organized in early...
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Major General John Cantwell discusses his book Exit Wounds, a searing story of the realities of Australia's recent wars and the enduring scars they leave on ...
Major General John Cantwell discusses his book Exit Wounds, a searing story of the realities of Australia's recent wars and the enduring scars they leave on ...
ANU Professor and Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, Amin Saikal, tells SBS his predictions for this year's Iranian election. Watch World N...
ANU Professor and Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, Amin Saikal, tells SBS his predictions for this year's Iranian election. Watch World N...
The delegates of Asia Pacific Week 2014 discuss questions of power in the context of the growing states in the Asia-Pacific, with some of the nation's leadin...
The delegates of Asia Pacific Week 2014 discuss questions of power in the context of the growing states in the Asia-Pacific, with some of the nation's leadin...
Professor Amin Saikal talks to SBS news on 17th Nov 08. Hamid Karzai has supposedly dared the international community to stop him negotiating with the Taliba...
Professor Amin Saikal talks to SBS news on 17th Nov 08. Hamid Karzai has supposedly dared the international community to stop him negotiating with the Taliba...
A panel discussion on what's next for the US in Syria as part of the Centre's postgraduate information evening. Panel featuring Professor Amin Saikal, Direct...
A panel discussion on what's next for the US in Syria as part of the Centre's postgraduate information evening. Panel featuring Professor Amin Saikal, Direct...
The rise of the so-called Islamic State (IS) in vast swathes of territories in Syria and Iraq, and the US-led military response to it, have introduced another complex dimension to an oil-rich but already very volatile Middle East. The old correlation of forces in support of maintaining the status quo, especially following the Iranian revolution more than 35 years ago, has been changing.
A set of new alignments and realignments along multiple regional fault-lines, including sectarian divisions and geopolitical rivalries at different levels, has come to redefine the region and possibly change its traditional political and territorial contours. IS has confronted all the regional states, from the Islamic Republic of Iran to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with a common enemy. Yet, it is the United States and its Western allies that have taken the lead in launching a military intervention to ‘degrade and eliminate’ IS, despite lacking a laudable past record in this respect.
This raises a number of questions. Should the problem of IS have been left to the regional actors to handle? Whilst IS may be containable, can it be defeated? Even if IS is eliminated, what guarantee is there that another extremist group won’t replace it? Can IS become a franchise, as al-Qaeda has? What is the possible best way to deal with religious extremism in the Middle East? What can be expected of the on-going air campaign against IS in terms of its consequences for the region, and the US and its allies?
This conversation looks at these questions in an attempt to unpack the nature of the mess that is the Middle East – a region so turbulent and yet so rich from which the world cannot simply disentangle itself.
Amin Saikal AM, FASSA is Professor of Political Science, Public Policy Fellow, and Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies (Middle East and Central Asia) at ANU.
He has been a Rockefeller Foundation Fellow in International Relations, and Visiting Fellow to Princeton University, Cambridge University and the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex. He is an awardee of the Order of Australia (AM) ‘for service to the international community and education through the development of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, and as an author and adviser’, and is an elected Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia.
His latest books include: Zone of Crisis: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran and Iraq (London: I.B. Tauris, 2014); Modern Afghanistan: A History of Struggle and Survival (London: I.B. Tauris, 2012); The Rise and Fall of the Shah: Iran from Autocracy to Religious Rule (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009); Islam and the West: Conflict or Cooperation? (London: Palgrave/Macmillan, 2003); Democracy and Reform in the Middle East and Asia: Social Protest and Authoritarian Rule after the Arab Spring (London: I.B. Tauris, 2014) - co-editor; and American Democracy Promotion in the Changing Middle East: From Bush to Obama (London: Routledge, 2013) - co-editor.
He has also published in major journals and dailies, including The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, The Wall Street Journal, and The Guardian, and is a frequent commentator on TV and radio networks on issues pertinent to his field of specialty.
Professor Saikal is joined in conversation by Virginia Haussegger.
Virginia Haussegger AM is an award winning journalist and social commentator. With more than 25 years in news broadcasting, her work has taken her around the globe – from the Middle East, Iraq, Europe, Afghanistan and Washington - reporting for Australia’s leading current affairs programs on Channel 9, the 7 Network and the ABC.
Virginia currently anchors ABC TV News in Canberra, and hosts a variety of panel discussions for broadcast, in addition to regularly addressing business and government forums on women, power and leadership. She is an Adjunct Professor with the Institute for Governance and Policy Analysis (IGPA) at the University of Canberra, and sits on various Boards, including UN Women National Committee Australia, and the ACT Government’s Cultural Facilities Corporation. In June 2014 Virginia was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for services to women's rights, gender equity, and to the media.
She maintains a busy portfolio of charity and community engagements, including as an advocate for the Afghan/Australian NGO “Mahboba’s Promise”, and as Patron of Save the Children ACT.
The rise of the so-called Islamic State (IS) in vast swathes of territories in Syria and Iraq, and the US-led military response to it, have introduced another complex dimension to an oil-rich but already very volatile Middle East. The old correlation of forces in support of maintaining the status quo, especially following the Iranian revolution more than 35 years ago, has been changing.
A set of new alignments and realignments along multiple regional fault-lines, including sectarian divisions and geopolitical rivalries at different levels, has come to redefine the region and possibly change its traditional political and territorial contours. IS has confronted all the regional states, from the Islamic Republic of Iran to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with a common enemy. Yet, it is the United States and its Western allies that have taken the lead in launching a military intervention to ‘degrade and eliminate’ IS, despite lacking a laudable past record in this respect.
This raises a number of questions. Should the problem of IS have been left to the regional actors to handle? Whilst IS may be containable, can it be defeated? Even if IS is eliminated, what guarantee is there that another extremist group won’t replace it? Can IS become a franchise, as al-Qaeda has? What is the possible best way to deal with religious extremism in the Middle East? What can be expected of the on-going air campaign against IS in terms of its consequences for the region, and the US and its allies?
This conversation looks at these questions in an attempt to unpack the nature of the mess that is the Middle East – a region so turbulent and yet so rich from which the world cannot simply disentangle itself.
Amin Saikal AM, FASSA is Professor of Political Science, Public Policy Fellow, and Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies (Middle East and Central Asia) at ANU.
He has been a Rockefeller Foundation Fellow in International Relations, and Visiting Fellow to Princeton University, Cambridge University and the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex. He is an awardee of the Order of Australia (AM) ‘for service to the international community and education through the development of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, and as an author and adviser’, and is an elected Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia.
His latest books include: Zone of Crisis: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran and Iraq (London: I.B. Tauris, 2014); Modern Afghanistan: A History of Struggle and Survival (London: I.B. Tauris, 2012); The Rise and Fall of the Shah: Iran from Autocracy to Religious Rule (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009); Islam and the West: Conflict or Cooperation? (London: Palgrave/Macmillan, 2003); Democracy and Reform in the Middle East and Asia: Social Protest and Authoritarian Rule after the Arab Spring (London: I.B. Tauris, 2014) - co-editor; and American Democracy Promotion in the Changing Middle East: From Bush to Obama (London: Routledge, 2013) - co-editor.
He has also published in major journals and dailies, including The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, The Wall Street Journal, and The Guardian, and is a frequent commentator on TV and radio networks on issues pertinent to his field of specialty.
Professor Saikal is joined in conversation by Virginia Haussegger.
Virginia Haussegger AM is an award winning journalist and social commentator. With more than 25 years in news broadcasting, her work has taken her around the globe – from the Middle East, Iraq, Europe, Afghanistan and Washington - reporting for Australia’s leading current affairs programs on Channel 9, the 7 Network and the ABC.
Virginia currently anchors ABC TV News in Canberra, and hosts a variety of panel discussions for broadcast, in addition to regularly addressing business and government forums on women, power and leadership. She is an Adjunct Professor with the Institute for Governance and Policy Analysis (IGPA) at the University of Canberra, and sits on various Boards, including UN Women National Committee Australia, and the ACT Government’s Cultural Facilities Corporation. In June 2014 Virginia was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for services to women's rights, gender equity, and to the media.
She maintains a busy portfolio of charity and community engagements, including as an advocate for the Afghan/Australian NGO “Mahboba’s Promise”, and as Patron of Save the Children ACT.
published:02 Feb 2015
views:5
Panel - The War in Afghanistan Has Just Begun, Festival of Dangerous Ideas 2012 (Ideas at the House)
As NATO sets an 'irreversible' course out of Afghanistan, President Barack Obama states 'we are now unified behind a plan to responsibly wind down the war in...
As NATO sets an 'irreversible' course out of Afghanistan, President Barack Obama states 'we are now unified behind a plan to responsibly wind down the war in...
Recent months have seen the people of the Arab world from Yemen to Egypt, and most recently in Libya, seeking to shake off decades of repression and politica...
Recent months have seen the people of the Arab world from Yemen to Egypt, and most recently in Libya, seeking to shake off decades of repression and politica...
Discussions on the relationship between China and the Middle East in light of recent events The Australia-China Youth Association and the ANU Middle East Lea...
Discussions on the relationship between China and the Middle East in light of recent events The Australia-China Youth Association and the ANU Middle East Lea...
Saudi ambassador to Washington Adel al-Jubeir calls the Saudi-led air campaign against Shi’ite Houthi rebels in Yemen a “war of necessity,” not a proxy war against Iran. Jubeir said that despite an Arab League decision to form a joint Arab intervention force, there are no immediate plans to introduce ground forces in Yemen.
Ambassador Jubeir said an objective of the air campaign is to protect the Yemeni people and government against the Houthis, who he described as a radical organization with ties to Iran and Hezbollah. He also said the Saudi campaign was launched Thursday at the behest of the legitimate Yemeni government of Abd Rabbou Mansur Hadi and is aimed at returning peace and stability to Saudi Arabia’s southern neighbor.
President Barack Obama, speaking Friday with Saudi King Salman, emphasized U.S. support for the action taken by Riyadh and its partners in Yemen, saying they both agreed the goal is Yemen’s lasting stability through a negotiated political solution.
The Saudi diplomat, appearing Sunday on the CBS program Face the Nation, said the air strikes, involving more than 10 nations, will continue until the objectives are met. He called it a war of necessity, not a proxy war between Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shi’ite Iran.
"We had no choice. We tried every possible way to avoid it. The Yemenis tried every possible way to avoid it. Agreements were made, and every single agreement that was made with the Houthis, 67 of them to be precise, the Houthis reneged on. So, they continue to take over the country, and when they were virtually about to take over the city of Aden with its president, [Abd Rabbou Mansur Hadi], we had to step in in response to the legitimate government to do so," he said.
He added that there is no plan to introduce ground forces in Yemen, but a Saudi military official, Brigadier General Ahmed Asseri, said some cross-border artillery strikes have been conducted against Houthi targets in northern Yemen.
Jubeir accused Iran of being heavily involved in supporting the Houthis.
"The Houthis are ideologically affiliated with Iran. The Iranians have provided them with weapons. The Iranians have provided them with advisers and the Iranians have provided them with money," said Jubeir.
Iran has denied arming the Houthis. Senator Richard Burr, chairman of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee, told the same broadcast audience Iran is involved and the Saudi coalition cannot allow it to gain a foothold in Yemen.
"We call them Houthis, but this is Iran. They’ve financed them. They’ve consulted them. They’ve sent weapons, and the fact is that the Gulf States, this coalition, will not stand by and see that presence ceded there," said Burr.
Burr said that lacking a U.S. presence, terrorism has flourished in the Middle East and is spreading to North Africa and Central Asia.
Ending a two-day summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt Sunday, Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Elaraby warned that Yemen is “on the brink of the abyss requiring effective Arab and international moves” to end what he called the Houthi coup and restore legitimacy. He said the League agreed, in principle, to create a joint Arab intervention force to face regional challenges and “maintain Arab national identity.”
Regional analyst Amin Saikal of the Australian National University believes it will take months for Arab League participants to form such a force.
“I think this is something President el-Sissi of Egypt has wanted, as a former military general and he’s now got the agreement of the Arab League, but, of course, it’s not absolutely clear that all the 22 Arab countries will participate in formation of this force,” said Saikal.
Saikal said a lack of unity among member states has frustrated past efforts at forming such a force, and that it is unclear who will finance, equip or provide the manpower for such a force.
In a separate appearance on the NBC program Meet the Press, Jubeir said that whether Saudi Arabia and Iran can co-exist peacefully depends on Tehran. He said his country has been the victim of repeated Iranian aggression and Saudi peace overtures have been rejected.
Jubeir said the Saudi kingdom supports an Iranian nuclear agreement, but it must be, he said, a solid deal that denies Iran the ability to acquire nuclear weapons and one that is verifiable.
As for his own country’s willingness to pursue such weapons if an agreement does not keep Iran from obtaining the bomb, Jubeir would only say every country has to look out for its own interests and protect its people. He says a threat assessment has to be made and a decision taken on how to deal with it.
Saudi ambassador to Washington Adel al-Jubeir calls the Saudi-led air campaign against Shi’ite Houthi rebels in Yemen a “war of necessity,” not a proxy war against Iran. Jubeir said that despite an Arab League decision to form a joint Arab intervention force, there are no immediate plans to introduce ground forces in Yemen.
Ambassador Jubeir said an objective of the air campaign is to protect the Yemeni people and government against the Houthis, who he described as a radical organization with ties to Iran and Hezbollah. He also said the Saudi campaign was launched Thursday at the behest of the legitimate Yemeni government of Abd Rabbou Mansur Hadi and is aimed at returning peace and stability to Saudi Arabia’s southern neighbor.
President Barack Obama, speaking Friday with Saudi King Salman, emphasized U.S. support for the action taken by Riyadh and its partners in Yemen, saying they both agreed the goal is Yemen’s lasting stability through a negotiated political solution.
The Saudi diplomat, appearing Sunday on the CBS program Face the Nation, said the air strikes, involving more than 10 nations, will continue until the objectives are met. He called it a war of necessity, not a proxy war between Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shi’ite Iran.
"We had no choice. We tried every possible way to avoid it. The Yemenis tried every possible way to avoid it. Agreements were made, and every single agreement that was made with the Houthis, 67 of them to be precise, the Houthis reneged on. So, they continue to take over the country, and when they were virtually about to take over the city of Aden with its president, [Abd Rabbou Mansur Hadi], we had to step in in response to the legitimate government to do so," he said.
He added that there is no plan to introduce ground forces in Yemen, but a Saudi military official, Brigadier General Ahmed Asseri, said some cross-border artillery strikes have been conducted against Houthi targets in northern Yemen.
Jubeir accused Iran of being heavily involved in supporting the Houthis.
"The Houthis are ideologically affiliated with Iran. The Iranians have provided them with weapons. The Iranians have provided them with advisers and the Iranians have provided them with money," said Jubeir.
Iran has denied arming the Houthis. Senator Richard Burr, chairman of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee, told the same broadcast audience Iran is involved and the Saudi coalition cannot allow it to gain a foothold in Yemen.
"We call them Houthis, but this is Iran. They’ve financed them. They’ve consulted them. They’ve sent weapons, and the fact is that the Gulf States, this coalition, will not stand by and see that presence ceded there," said Burr.
Burr said that lacking a U.S. presence, terrorism has flourished in the Middle East and is spreading to North Africa and Central Asia.
Ending a two-day summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt Sunday, Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Elaraby warned that Yemen is “on the brink of the abyss requiring effective Arab and international moves” to end what he called the Houthi coup and restore legitimacy. He said the League agreed, in principle, to create a joint Arab intervention force to face regional challenges and “maintain Arab national identity.”
Regional analyst Amin Saikal of the Australian National University believes it will take months for Arab League participants to form such a force.
“I think this is something President el-Sissi of Egypt has wanted, as a former military general and he’s now got the agreement of the Arab League, but, of course, it’s not absolutely clear that all the 22 Arab countries will participate in formation of this force,” said Saikal.
Saikal said a lack of unity among member states has frustrated past efforts at forming such a force, and that it is unclear who will finance, equip or provide the manpower for such a force.
In a separate appearance on the NBC program Meet the Press, Jubeir said that whether Saudi Arabia and Iran can co-exist peacefully depends on Tehran. He said his country has been the victim of repeated Iranian aggression and Saudi peace overtures have been rejected.
Jubeir said the Saudi kingdom supports an Iranian nuclear agreement, but it must be, he said, a solid deal that denies Iran the ability to acquire nuclear weapons and one that is verifiable.
As for his own country’s willingness to pursue such weapons if an agreement does not keep Iran from obtaining the bomb, Jubeir would only say every country has to look out for its own interests and protect its people. He says a threat assessment has to be made and a decision taken on how to deal with it.
published:30 Mar 2015
views:4
Gopichand Jasoos (1982)Comedy - 19 February 1982 (India)
St.James Church-Kashmiri Gate - Obituary. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khalistan Prosecution of those responsible for November 1984 Anti-Sikh Pogroms Referre...
St.James Church-Kashmiri Gate - Obituary. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khalistan Prosecution of those responsible for November 1984 Anti-Sikh Pogroms Referre...
St.James Church-Kashmiri Gate - Obituary. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khalistan Prosecution of those responsible for November 1984 Anti-Sikh Pogroms Referre...
St.James Church-Kashmiri Gate - Obituary. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khalistan Prosecution of those responsible for November 1984 Anti-Sikh Pogroms Referre...
Mahmoud Saika, the former Afghan Deputy Foreign Minister speaks about the upcoming meeting of the Afghan and US presidents to be held in early January 2013 i...
Mahmoud Saika, the former Afghan Deputy Foreign Minister speaks about the upcoming meeting of the Afghan and US presidents to be held in early January 2013 i...
TOLOnews 30 November 2012 KANKASH / کنکاش ۳۰ نومبر ۲۰۱۲
TOLOnews 30 November 2012 KANKASH / کنکاش ۳۰ نومبر ۲۰۱۲
TOLOnews 30 November 2012 KANKASH / کنکاش ۳۰ نومبر ۲۰۱۲
Pakistan Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar presented a draft proposal of a partnership agreement to Afghanistan, saying it is "walking the talk" on peace in...
50:14
TOLOnews 27 September 2013 KANKASH / کنکاش ۲۷ سپتمبر ۲۰۱۳
TOLOnews 27 September 2013 KANKASH / کنکاش ۲۷ سپتمبر ۲۰۱۳
TOLOnews 27 September 2013 KANKASH / کنکاش ۲۷ سپتمبر ۲۰۱۳
Pakistani government recently released Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban's second-in-command, in an effort to accelerate the stalled peace process. The...
4:46
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on Australian exit strategy
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on Australian exit strategy
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on Australian exit strategy
Mahmoud Saikal is a former Deputy Foreign Minister in the Karzai government and joins us from Kabul to reflect on plans to withdraw most Australian troops fr...
5:20
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on country's future
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on country's future
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on country's future
Mahmoud Saikal was once Deputy Foreign Minister of Afghanistan and joins us from Kabul to discuss the country's current situation after the shooting of 16 ci...
4:25
My Interview with Zinor Layla, Israeli Channel 10 - 6 Feb 2011 About the Egyptian Revolution
My Interview with Zinor Layla, Israeli Channel 10 - 6 Feb 2011 About the Egyptian Revolution
My Interview with Zinor Layla, Israeli Channel 10 - 6 Feb 2011 About the Egyptian Revolution
My Interview with Zinor Layla, Israeli Channel 10 - 6 Feb 2011 About the Egyptian Revolution.
57:46
Emeritus Professor Galal Amin Speaks about Egypt in Revolution
Emeritus Professor Galal Amin Speaks about Egypt in Revolution
Emeritus Professor Galal Amin Speaks about Egypt in Revolution
Transforming Egypt series which is part of the School of Business seminar series held a lecture by Emeritus Professor Galal Amin titled Egypt in Revolution. ...
4:13
Interview with Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh
Interview with Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh
Interview with Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh
SBS speaks to University of Melbourne Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh about the situation in Iran in the context of the EU's oil embargo on the country. Watch W...
TOLOnews 30 November 2012 KANKASH / کنکاش ۳۰ نومبر ۲۰۱۲
Pakistan Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar presented a draft proposal of a partnership agreement to Afghanistan, saying it is "walking the talk" on peace in...
Pakistan Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar presented a draft proposal of a partnership agreement to Afghanistan, saying it is "walking the talk" on peace in...
Pakistani government recently released Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban's second-in-command, in an effort to accelerate the stalled peace process. The...
Pakistani government recently released Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban's second-in-command, in an effort to accelerate the stalled peace process. The...
Mahmoud Saikal is a former Deputy Foreign Minister in the Karzai government and joins us from Kabul to reflect on plans to withdraw most Australian troops fr...
Mahmoud Saikal is a former Deputy Foreign Minister in the Karzai government and joins us from Kabul to reflect on plans to withdraw most Australian troops fr...
Mahmoud Saikal was once Deputy Foreign Minister of Afghanistan and joins us from Kabul to discuss the country's current situation after the shooting of 16 ci...
Mahmoud Saikal was once Deputy Foreign Minister of Afghanistan and joins us from Kabul to discuss the country's current situation after the shooting of 16 ci...
Transforming Egypt series which is part of the School of Business seminar series held a lecture by Emeritus Professor Galal Amin titled Egypt in Revolution. ...
Transforming Egypt series which is part of the School of Business seminar series held a lecture by Emeritus Professor Galal Amin titled Egypt in Revolution. ...
SBS speaks to University of Melbourne Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh about the situation in Iran in the context of the EU's oil embargo on the country. Watch W...
SBS speaks to University of Melbourne Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh about the situation in Iran in the context of the EU's oil embargo on the country. Watch W...
Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Egypt: Mubarak's legacy and its implications - Amin Saikal at ANU, 10 Feb 2011
Professor Amin Saikal, Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies at The Australian National University gives this public lecture: 'Egypt: Mubarek's...
In Conversation: Prof Bob Bowker and Prof Amin Saikal AM
In Conversation: Prof Bob Bowker and Prof Amin Saikal AM
Prof Bob Bowker sits down with Prof Amin Saikal to discuss the publication of his new book, entitled 'American Democracy Promotion in the Middle East: From B...
Professor Amin Saikal AM: Afghanistan on the brink
Professor Amin Saikal AM: Afghanistan on the brink
Professor Amin Saikal AM fom the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies ANU gives a public lecture on 'Afghanistan on the brink'. Afghanistan is in a state of c...
Prof. Amin Saikal: The Changing Political and Strategic Environment in West Asia
Prof. Amin Saikal: The Changing Political and Strategic Environment in West Asia
The Asian Security Conference (ASC) is a major calendar event of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi which is organized in early...
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria,...
published:12 Sep 2014
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
There is only a 'slim' chance that an American-led coalition can defeat ISIL within Syria, according to Professor Amin Saikal.
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
Chance of success in Syria 'slim'
10:12
published:12 Sep 2014
views:7
30:57
Major General John Cantwell: Exit Wounds
Major General John Cantwell discusses his book Exit Wounds, a searing story of the realiti...
Major General John Cantwell discusses his book Exit Wounds, a searing story of the realities of Australia's recent wars and the enduring scars they leave on ...
Extended interview: What to expect from the Iranian election
Extended interview: What to expect from the Iranian election
ANU Professor and Director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, Amin Saikal, tells SBS his predictions for this year's Iranian election. Watch World N...
The delegates of Asia Pacific Week 2014 discuss questions of power in the context of the growing states in the Asia-Pacific, with some of the nation's leadin...
Professor Amin Saikal talks to SBS news on 17th Nov 08. Hamid Karzai has supposedly dared the international community to stop him negotiating with the Taliba...
What next for the US in Syria? - Postgraduate information evening 15/10/13
What next for the US in Syria? - Postgraduate information evening 15/10/13
A panel discussion on what's next for the US in Syria as part of the Centre's postgraduate information evening. Panel featuring Professor Amin Saikal, Direct...
TOLOnews 30 November 2012 KANKASH / کنکاش ۳۰ نومبر ۲۰۱۲
TOLOnews 30 November 2012 KANKASH / کنکاش ۳۰ نومبر ۲۰۱۲
Pakistan Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar presented a draft proposal of a partnership agreement to Afghanistan, saying it is "walking the talk" on peace in...
TOLOnews 27 September 2013 KANKASH / کنکاش ۲۷ سپتمبر ۲۰۱۳
TOLOnews 27 September 2013 KANKASH / کنکاش ۲۷ سپتمبر ۲۰۱۳
Pakistani government recently released Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban's second-in-command, in an effort to accelerate the stalled peace process. The...
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on Australian exit strategy
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on Australian exit strategy
Mahmoud Saikal is a former Deputy Foreign Minister in the Karzai government and joins us from Kabul to reflect on plans to withdraw most Australian troops fr...
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on country's future
Former Afghanistan Deputy Minister reflects on country's future
Mahmoud Saikal was once Deputy Foreign Minister of Afghanistan and joins us from Kabul to discuss the country's current situation after the shooting of 16 ci...
Emeritus Professor Galal Amin Speaks about Egypt in Revolution
Emeritus Professor Galal Amin Speaks about Egypt in Revolution
Transforming Egypt series which is part of the School of Business seminar series held a lecture by Emeritus Professor Galal Amin titled Egypt in Revolution. ...
SBS speaks to University of Melbourne Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh about the situation in Iran in the context of the EU's oil embargo on the country. Watch W...
A female drug mule was arrested carrying 1.5kg of liquid cocaine in her breast implants as she tried to board a flight from the Colombian capital to Barcelona in Spain... Sabillon was arrested on suspicion of smuggling drugs ... ....
WASHINGTON, June 19, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The nation's military working dogs, each of whom saves the lives of between 150-200 servicemen and women in the course of their career, are one step closer to being guaranteed treatment as the heroes they are as the U.S ... The language was introduced in the House by Congressman Frank LoBiondo (R-NJ) and the Senate by SenatorClaire McCaskill (D-MO) ... About American Humane Association ... ....
Article by WN.com Correspondent DallasDarling. In "Straw Dogs. Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals," John Gray writes that due to scientific progress and industrialization, most people today think they belong to a species that can be master of their own destiny.(1) But such a belief system is a human construct, a false reality and abstract construction invented by humans who believe they are superior to other animal species ... 3....
19 June 2015Last updated at 07.03 BST. Hundreds of thousands of tiny crabs have been washing up on the beaches of Southern California in the US, after warm ocean currents carried them closer to the shoreline than usual. The red tuna crabs have been dying in hordes on beaches from San Diego to Orange County, as Ben Bland reports ...World ... ....
The world is embarking on its sixth mass extinction with animals disappearing about 100 times faster than they used to, scientists warned Friday, and humans could be among the first victims. Not since the age of the dinosaurs ended 66 million years ago has the planet been losing species at this rapid a rate, said a study led by experts at Stanford University, Princeton University and the University of California, Berkeley....
Regional analyst AminSaikal of the Australian National University believes it will take months for Arab League participants to form such a force ...Saikal said a lack of unity among member states has frustrated past efforts at forming such a force, and that it is unclear who will finance, equip or provide the manpower for such a force....
Click for more photos My life under Islamic State. A woman hugs a teddy bear given to her by her now husband, the one precious possession she has from home when fleeing from ISIL in Fallujah to Baghdad, Iraq. Photo. Kate Geraghty. View all 19 photos ...AminSaikal, director of the Centre of Arab and Islamic Studies, is one analyst who believes the West acted "too soon" in deploying military aircraft and advisers ... ....