Case Name YMCA (Smalltown) Accident at Three Mile Island (March)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Case Name YMCA (Smalltown) Accident at Three Mile Island (March) Case Name YMCA (Smalltown) Accident at Three Mile Island (March) Albanian Pyramid Schemes (Smalltown ) Communal Riots in Malegaon, India Hanbo Scandal Y2K Crisis in Korea Currency Crisis in South Korea of 1997 (Jong) Disaster in Waco (Koester) Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (Watson) Crisis at Enron (Kerling) Fall of Fujimori Gulf War 1991 Iran Hostage Crisis (Reagan) US-China Plane Crash Incident Daewoo Group Financial Crisis Columbia Space Shuttle Disaster Russian Dam and Ukrainian Border Crisis US Military Intervention in Somalia (Averill) War Tension India and Pakistan Yellowstone Forest Fire (1988) Cryptosporidium Outbreak in Milwaukee US Assistance in Somalia (Seitz) Iran Hostage Crisis (Reagan) Federal Raid on Ruby Ridge 1981 Air Traffic Controllers Strike (Hyatt) 1988 Epidemic Among Harbor Seals Korean Cargo Workers Strike of 2003 Baia Mare Disaster Bhopal Gas Tragedy (Chaudhary) Cuban Missile Crisis European Commission Fining of Greece Japan MOX Fuel Falsification Scandal Korean Nuclear Waste Disposal Site 1998 Syracuse Labor Day Storm FAA September 11, 2001 (Woodin) Ethnic Violence in Kokrajhar, India (Kumar) Gujarat Earthquake Election Bombing in Andhra Pradesh, India Sampoong Department Store Collapse Flash Floods in Sirsa, India Hemodialysis Deaths in Croatia Lima Hostage Drama Love Canal Crisis NATO & Kosovo Conflict Red River Flood 1997 Biker Wars in Scandinavia Columbine High School Shootings (Lamanna) Bankruptcy of Banka Baltija Estonia Flight Hijacking (1994 Aeroflot) Refugee Crisis in Estonia 1994-1995 Estonia Peacekeepers Accident 1997 Latvia Spring Flood 1998 Economic Overheating in Estonia Kostivere Arms Robbery 1997 Narva Referendum Crisis 1993 Latvia Russian Crisis 1998 Latvia Russian Security Guarantees MV Estonia Catastrophe Bush Rejection of Kyoto Protocol War of Independence in Slovenia Kosovo Crisis and NATO Campaign 1998 Earthquake in Posocje Region November 1998 Slovenia Floods DAR Factory Fire in Koper Gas Explosion in Maribor Gorenje Factory Fire Collapse of Kolizej Building Y2K in Slovenia Ariquipa's Population Uprising Bolidan Dam Rupture (very long!) Stockholm JAS Fighter Crash 1993 Auckland Unplugged (very long!) Murder of Olof Palme Commission and Mad Cow Disease Brolin Kidnapping Sweden and Chernobyl Fallout Crisis Breakdown of Pastrana's Peace Process Halland Tunnel Crisis 1982 Harsfjarden Submarine Incident Nuclear Accident at Tokai-mura, Japan British Government and BSE Crisis Three Mile Island Nuclear Disaster (Derrane) *Korean DMZ Crisis UN and 1994 Rwandan Crisis 1995 Neftegorsk Earthquake Kursk Submarine Accident Clinton Impeachment and House Judiciary Committee Columbine High School Shooting (Greenberg) MOVE Phillly Hurricane Andrew Georgia Strait Pipeline Case Swiss Air Flight 111 Crash Firestone Crisis North Korea Nuclear Crisis 2002-03 Nike Labor Crisis *UNIDO Ludhiana Project Crisis Oru Peat Factory Bankruptcy 1996-97 Collapsed Platform Accident in Talsi 1980 U.S. Canada Air Pollution Oil Pollution in Ortnek New York City Government and September 11 Social Welfare and Benefits for Chernobyl Liquidators Ecological Disaster in Town of Karabash Downfall of Arthur Andersen Federal Reserve and Long-Term Capital Crisis Pan Am 103 and Syracuse University Thailand Currency Crisis of 1997 1975 New York City Fiscal Crisis WorldCom Collapse March 11, 2004 Madrid Bombing Ranger Students Hypothermia Deaths Washington DC Sniper Anthrax Letters and Brentwood Mail Facility (Dixon) Kennedy Administration and Bay of Pigs Fiasco U.S. BSE Crisis MV Eterino Slaveship Crisis Turkey and US Troop Deployments Mayaguez Incident Apollo 13 (Cha) U.S. Navy out of Vieques Japanese Attack on Pearl Harbor Failure of Operation Eagle Claw in Iran Highway 56 Accident in Korea Terrorist Attack at 1972 Olympics in Munich September 11 and DCE Response of St. Vincent's Hospital to September 11, 2001 Aracinovo Crisis in Macedonia Berlin Wall Mumbai Bombings, India Eruption of Mt. St. Helen's SARS in China Assassination Attempt on President Reagan Abduction of Elizabeth Smart New York State Pension Reform 2003-04 National Conflicts and NEIS in South Korea US Policy on Haiti during the Clinton Administration Florida and 2000 US Presidential Election Srebrenica Crisis Watergate Crisis Crisis at Panmujom, Korea 1976 (DMZ One Tree) Attica Prison Riot Buan Crisis of Nuclear Waste Disposal Facility Buan Crisis in South Korea Strike of Korean Government Workers Union Performance Allowance Case Capital Relocation Project in Korea Korean Currency Crisis 1997 (Yongkeun) 2002 Cheonggyecheon Restoration Project Presidential Impeachment Trial in South Korea 2004 Rail Strike of South Korea in 2003 Jeonnam, Korea College Merger Crises Bhopal Gas Tragedy (Rao) Hijacking of Indian Airlines Flight 814 1994 North Korea Nuclear Crisis Tsunami in Andaman and Nicobar Islands Train Accident at Khanna, India Hurricane Isabel Crisis Action Plan Florida 2004 Hurricanes FEMA Response to Hurricane Isabel Hurricane Camille Hurricane Andrew Hurricane Iniki Crisis Quecreek Mine Disaster 2003 California Wildland Fires Contamination of Black River Love Canal Crisis (Schuler) Collapse of the Silver Bridge New York City Transit Strike 2005 Space Shuttle Columbia Disaster Love Canal (Yung) Air Traffic Controllers Labor Strike (Rost) San Francisco Earthquake of 1989 Hurricane Katrina Ramstein Airshow Disaster Apollo 13 (Robertson) Truman and U.S. Foreign Policy after World War II U.S. Foreign Policy in Colombia Rapid City Flood Crisis China SARS Crisis Management 2003 (Guosheng) Baia Mare cyanide spill, Hungary Guns of Dorchester, 1775-1776-Apicellis Japanese Jusen Financial Crisis-Oniki Kidnapping of Aldo Moro-Christensen Korean Financial Crisis-Ahn Oklahoma Bombing 1995-Thiel Tiananmen Crisis 1989-Thuy Chung Dang US Decision: Rwanda Asian Financial Crisis: IMF in Indonesia Cyprus, Turkish Military Invervention Duke Univ. Lacross Scandal Exxon Valdez Spill Gujarat Riots Kosovo Crisis of 1998-1999 LA Riots of 1992 Pan AM 103-Scotland's Response Rwanda and the United Nations Senegalese Ferry Sinking Suez Canal U-2 Plane Incident 1998 US Embassy Bombings in East Africa Iran Hostage Crisis 1979-80 Collapse of Concorde Boulevard Bridge Denmark Cartoon Crisis Myanmar Crisis 2007: The Saffron Revolution Crash of Sibir Airlines 1812, Ukraine London Transit Bombings, July 2005 Attica Prison Riot September 1971 US 2000 Presidential Election Virginia Tech Massacre 2007 Leak of Virulent Chemical, China, 2005 Norbert Zongo Murder Falcone Assassination by Cosa Nostra, Sicily Siege of Colombian Palace of Justice Thailand 2008 Political Crisis The Rangoon Bombing of 1983 Guangzhou Crisis of 1839 Crisis in Congo: Conflict in the North Kivu Province Watergate and the Fall of Richard Nixon Violence in Israeli-Palestinian Conflict 2008 Great Hanshin Earthquake Lebanon and Hezbollah's Internal Clash, 2008 1987 US Stock Market Crash Georgia Water Crisis 2006-2007 Plot to Kill Hitler, 1944 Kenya's 2007 Post-Election Crisis Abu Ghraib Crisis Hood Crisis between Turkey and US, 2003 Haitian School Collapse of 2008 2008 Waste Emergency in Naples The 2008 Mumbai Attacks Dutch Reaction of Extremism: Murder of Theo Van Gogh South Korean Involvement in Iraq Military Crisis in West Sea of Korean Peninsula Quecreek Mine Accident (Hudson) *Radioactive Waste Repository *August 2003 Blackout US and Canada *Daegu Subway Fire Calamity U.S. Military Intervention in Panama Political Crisis and Royal Power in Nepal SARS Crisis in Hong Kong Argentinian Financial Crisis Canadian Military Operation in Somalia SARS Crisis in China (Yahui) Russian Theatre Siege 2002 Beslan School Crisis Bird Flu Crisis in China October Crisis Terrorist Kidnappings Channel Tunnel Fire Incident Entebbe RescueI, Israel United Nations and Rwanda Genocide United Nations Policy on Darfur Ukraine 2004 Elections Bombings in London July 2005 Shootings at Dunblane Primary School 1986 Tylenol Crisis 1995 Budget Battle and Government Shutdown 1996 Centennial Olympic Park Bombing 2002 Crisis in U.S. Catholic Church Abu Ghraib Crisis Acid Attack on Syracuse Planned Parenthood Affirmative Action at University of Michigan Anthrax in Washington D.C. Post Offices (Goddard) CBS 60 Minutes Scandal Concorde U.S. Landing Rights Crisis at Kent State University Diazinon Agreement DMZ Axe Murders 1976 East Los Angeles High School Blowouts Economic Crisis in Buffalo, New York Eisenhower and Taiwan Strait Crisis Enron Crisis (Arora) Erie Canal Development Contract Scandal Exxon Valdez Crisis (Berry) Iran Hostage Crisis (Placito) Iran Hostage Crisis and Operation Eagle Claw (Jones) Iranian Flight 655 and USS Vincennes Los Angeles Police Corruption Incident Los Angeles Rodney King Riots New York City Fire Department and September 11 Operation Provide Comfort Plattsburgh Air Force Base Closure Reagan Administration and Beirut Bombing Red Lake Massacre High School Massacre September 11, 2001 and US Airspace (Carter) Son of Sam New York City Murders Syracuse Symphony Orchestra Tylenol Crisis 1982 (Grasos) Tylenol Tampering Crisis 1982 (Grisanti) Waco Incident (Scott) Political Crisis in Venezuela 1983 Beirut Embassy Bombing 2004 Taiwan Presidential Election SARS Singapore 1976 Ebola Outbreak Sudan 2010 Chilean Mining Crisis The 2012 Paraguayan Political Crisis H1N1 Mexico The 2012 ASEAN Foreign Minister Meeting Crisis Levon Affair of 1954. Israel.
Recommended publications
  • Record of North Korea's Major Conventional Provocations Since
    May 25, 2010 Record of North Korea’s Major Conventional Provocations since 1960s Complied by the Office of the Korea Chair, CSIS Please note that the conventional provocations we listed herein only include major armed conflicts, military/espionage incursions, border infractions, acts of terrorism including sabotage bombings and political assassinations since the 1960s that resulted in casualties in order to analyze the significance of the attack on the Cheonan and loss of military personnel. This list excludes any North Korean verbal threats and instigation, kidnapping as well as the country’s missile launches and nuclear tests. January 21, 1968 Blue House Raid A North Korean armed guerrilla unit crossed the Demilitarized Zone into South Korea and, in disguise of South Korean military and civilians, attempted to infiltrate the Blue House to assassinate South Korean President Park Chung-hee. The assassination attempt was foiled, and in the process of pursuing commandos escaping back to North Korea, a significant number of South Korean police and soldiers were killed and wounded, allegedly as many as 68 and 66, respectively. Six American casualties were also reported. ROK Response: All 31 North Korean infiltrators were hunted down and killed except Kim Shin-Jo. After the raid, South Korea swiftly moved to strengthen the national defense by establishing the ROK Reserve Forces and defense industry and installing iron fencing along the military demarcation line. January 23, 1968 USS Pueblo Seizure The U.S. navy intelligence ship Pueblo on its mission near the coast of North Korea was captured in international waters by North Korea. Out of 83 crewmen, one died and 82 men were held prisoners for 11 months.
    [Show full text]
  • Completed Case Studies
    Completed Crisis Management Case Studies Case Name Country 1967 Six Day War Case Study Israel 1968 Student Massacre at Tlatelolco Mexico 1974 Turkish Military Intervention in Cyprus Cyprus 1987 U.S. Stock Market Crash United States 1998 U.S. Embassy Bombings in East Africa United States 2000 Presidential Election United States 2005 New York City Transit Strike United States 2006-2007 Georgia Water Crisis United States 2007 South Korean Hostage Crisis in Afghanistan Afghanistan 2008 Mumbai Terror Attacks India 2008 Political Crisis in Thailand Thailand 2008 Waste Emergency in Naples Italy A Bloody May in the Spring of Beirut Lebanon A Case Study on the Virginia Tech Massacre United States Abu Ghraib Crisis United States Accident at Three Mile Island United States Air Traffic Controllers Labor Strike United States Air Traffic Controllers Strike 1981 United States Albanian Pyramid Schemes Albania Anthrax Letters and Brentwood Mail Facility United States Apollo 13 United States Aracinovo Crisis in Macedonia Macedonia Asian Financial Crisis in South Korea South Korea Asian Financial Crisis: IMF Intervention in Indonesia Indonesia Assassination Attempt on President Reagan United States Attica Prison Riot September 1971 United States Baia Mare Cyanide Spill Hungary Baia Mare Disaster Hungary Bankruptcy of Banka Baltija Slovenia Bhopal Gas Tragedy India Biker Wars in Scandinavia Sweden Bolivian Political Crisis – 2008 Bolivia Breakdown of Pastrana's Peace Process Colombia United British Government and BSE Crisis Kingdom Buan Crisis in South Korea
    [Show full text]
  • Diaspora and Unification: the Changing Landscape on the Korean Peninsula and A
    Diaspora and Unification: The Changing Landscape on the Korean Peninsula and A Diasporic Community’s Response—With the Focus on Korean Americans in the Greater Houston Area Alex Jong-Seok Lee Sonia Ryang Introduction To return to the unified state, which is the original form of the Korean nation—this is the mantra that one hears from many South Korean commentators, professional and lay people alike. The return to one Korea, the original form, in this view, is a return also to the normal and true state that reflects the ontological identity of the Korean nation, or so the historical discourse goes. Koreans, as President Moon Jae In stated in front of the 150,000 citizens of Pyongyang on his historic visit to North Korea in June 2018, have lived together for five thousand years and have lived apart, in partition, for seventy years, the assertion being that it is wrong that one nation be divided into two separate states and that, hence, we are required to right this wrong. Emotions aside, the breadth of the range of discussions about the possibility of unification—or the lack thereof—currently evident in South Korea is truly remarkable. Public and academic discussions are filled with propositions concerning how to Transnational Asia: an online interdisciplinary journal Volume 3, Issue 1 https://transnationalasia.rice.edu https://doi.org/10.25613/efkr-hk17 2 understand, approach, and attain national unification, reflecting the rapidly changing situation on the Korean peninsula that the world witnessed during 2018. Indeed, since the dawning of that year, the Korean peninsula has seen a series of unprecedented events, events that had been utterly unthinkable even as late as 2017.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix A: Summary of Hypotheses
    Appendix A: Summary of Hypotheses No. Hypotheses Frameworks Risk reduction : NS 1 Fatalism increases the likelihood of decision makers who emphasize the PF uncertainty of a crisis and decrease the likelihood of decision makers who emphasize the urgency of responding to it 2 Individualism increases the likelihood of decision makers who disparage PF the threat involved in a crisis 3 Hierarchy increases the likelihood of decision makers who have PF anticipated a crisis 4 Egalitarianism increases the likelihood of decision makers who NS emphasize the threat involved in a crisis 5 Hierarchical culture fears social disorder NS 6 Egalitarian culture fears risk that might harm many people PF 7 Individualistic culture fears risk to freedom PF 8 Fatalistic culture fears risk in general PF Decision Making (- process and - units ): NS 9 Hierarchy increases the likelihood of vertical movement of power up the NS chain of command into the hands of one or a few strong leader(s) 10 Fatalism increases the likelihood of a vertical movement of power up PF the chain of command into the hands of one or a few strong leader(s) 11 Egalitarianism increases the likelihood of a positive relation with GLF occurrence of formal decentralization within a set framework 12 Individualism increases the likelihood of a positive relation with NS occurrence of informal decentralization within a set framework 13 Egalitarianism decreases the likelihood of predominant leader as the NS most infl uential type of decision-making unit in crisis situations 14 Egalitarianism increases the likelihood of coalition of autonomous PF multiple actors as the most important type of decision-making unit in crisis response 15 Hierarchy increases the likelihood of “groupthink” among members of a CLF, GLF decision-making unit © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2015 169 Á.E.
    [Show full text]
  • Interpreting Myanmar a Decade of Analysis
    INTERPRETING MYANMAR A DECADE OF ANALYSIS INTERPRETING MYANMAR A DECADE OF ANALYSIS ANDREW SELTH Published by ANU Press The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] Available to download for free at press.anu.edu.au ISBN (print): 9781760464042 ISBN (online): 9781760464059 WorldCat (print): 1224563457 WorldCat (online): 1224563308 DOI: 10.22459/IM.2020 This title is published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial- NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). The full licence terms are available at creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode Cover design and layout by ANU Press. Cover photograph: Yangon, Myanmar by mathes on Bigstock. This edition © 2020 ANU Press CONTENTS Acronyms and abbreviations . xi Glossary . xv Acknowledgements . xvii About the author . xix Protocols and politics . xxi Introduction . 1 THE INTERPRETER POSTS, 2008–2019 2008 1 . Burma: The limits of international action (12:48 AEDT, 7 April 2008) . 13 2 . A storm of protest over Burma (14:47 AEDT, 9 May 2008) . 17 3 . Burma’s continuing fear of invasion (11:09 AEDT, 28 May 2008) . 21 4 . Burma’s armed forces: How loyal? (11:08 AEDT, 6 June 2008) . 25 5 . The Rambo approach to Burma (10:37 AEDT, 20 June 2008) . 29 6 . Burma and the Bush White House (10:11 AEDT, 26 August 2008) . 33 7 . Burma’s opposition movement: A house divided (07:43 AEDT, 25 November 2008) . 37 2009 8 . Is there a Burma–North Korea–Iran nuclear conspiracy? (07:26 AEDT, 25 February 2009) . 43 9 . US–Burma: Where to from here? (14:09 AEDT, 28 April 2009) .
    [Show full text]
  • East Asia in the “New Era” in World Politics
    v55.i1.038.dittmer 12/20/02 4:05 PM Page 38 EAST ASIA IN THE “NEW ERA” IN WORLD POLITICS By LOWELL DITTMER * HE purpose of this article is to consider the impact of the events Tof September 11 on world politics, taking American policy toward East Asia as a case study. Although it is South Asia and not East Asia that was the source of the terrorist attack and hence the main focus of the American reaction, there are at least three reasons why East Asia merits our attention. First, East Asia is of increasing political and eco- nomic importance in the world, the site of the two most sanguinary conventional wars since World War II and the only region to have in- creased its proportionate share of the world’s GNP and trade.1 That this assessment is shared by the current American leadership is indicated inter alia in the 2001 Quarterly Defense Review, which advocates a “par- adigm shift in force planning” to better accommodate anticipated de- fense needs in the Asian Pacific.2 Second, as the site of an ancient civilization of proud pedigree currently in renascence, East Asia sees it- self positioned to question, perhaps challenge Occidental notions of “modernization,” specifically the self-selected American leadership role in the world. Third, although East Asia has historically been less plagued by terror than the Middle East or Europe (in part because of high economic growth rates and relatively flat distribution patterns), there has in the past decade or so been an unprecedented upsurge in terrorism within the region, leading some to consider that Southeast Asia should be a “second front” after the destruction of the Taliban.3 *I wish to thank Gilbert Rozman for his helpful comments on an earlier draft of this article, and the Center for Chinese Studies at the University of California at Berkeley for funding support.
    [Show full text]
  • Hybrid Conflict: the Roles of Russia, North Korea and China
    Hybrid Conflict: The Roles of Russia, North Korea and China Edited by: Frans-Paul van der Putten, Minke Meijnders, Sico van der Meer and Tony van der Togt A report by the Dutch National Network of Safety and Security Analysts (ANV) May 2018 Hybrid Conflict: The Roles of Russia, North Korea and China Edited by: Frans-Paul van der Putten, Minke Meijnders, Sico van der Meer and Tony van der Togt A report by the Dutch National Network of Safety and Security Analysts (ANV) May 2018 About the National Network of Safety and Security Analysts This report is the outcome of a project conducted by the Clingendael Institute as a member of the Dutch National Network of Safety and Security Analysts (ANV) on behalf of the National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism (NCTV) of the Netherlands. The ANV is a knowledge network that was established in 2010. The ANV consists of a permanent core of six organisations surrounded by a network of organisations such as knowledge institutions, research agencies, civil services, safety regions, critical infrastructure sectors, private companies and consultancy firms which are engaged in the production of the National Risk Assessment (NRA) and underlying studies depending on the knowledge requirement. The permanent core consists of: • The National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) • The Research and Documentation Centre (WODC), Ministry of Security and Justice • The General Intelligence and Security Service of the Netherlands (AIVD) • The Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) • The Netherlands Institute of International Relations ‘Clingendael’ • The International Institute of Social Studies (ISS) of the Erasmus University Rotterdam May 2018 © The Netherlands Institute of International Relations ‘Clingendael’.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter IV. Maintenance of Public Safety and Disaster Countermeasures
    Chapter IV. Maintenance of Public Safety and Disaster Countermeasures Section 1. Situation of International Terrorism (1) Islamic Extremists and Other Extremists of extremist thought; specifically, extremist One Japanese citizen was among the 160 casualties organizations and their supporters are thought to be of the series of terrorist attacks which occurred in making effective use of the internet to spread extremist Mumbai, India in 2008. As shown in Table 4-1, the thought and recruit constituent members. number of terrorism incidents around the world is Through such means, it has recently been observed increasing. Despite the strengthening of terrorism that organizations that do not have a direct connection countermeasures by governments of all countries since to Al-Qaeda’s core (the leadership) are propagating the terrorist attacks on the United States on 11 Sept terrorism schemes in various parts of the world. In 2001, the threat of terrorism by Islamic extremists particular, every country in the world now recognizes remains as high as ever. Among them, Al-Qaeda is that there is a danger of individuals with no connection attracting Islamic extremists in the world as the symbol to terrorist organizations otherwise being influenced by of jihad (holy war) against the United States. extremist thought spread through the internet, leading Moreover, it is believed that Islamic extremist them to carry out terrorist activities. organizations such as Al-Qaeda are forming networks Table 4-1 Major Incidents of International Terrorism in 2008 Date Incident 2 Jun. The bombing of the Embassy of Denmark in Islamabad, Pakistan 1 Jul. The exposure of a terrorist plot in Palembang, Indonesia 7 Jul.
    [Show full text]
  • North Korea Cyber Activity
    REPORT North Korea Cyber Activity Recorded Future Insikt Group Table of Contents Part 1: North Korea is Not Crazy Background ....................................................................................................................5 Analysis ............................................................................................................................8 “Blue House Raid” ....................................................................................................... 10 1983 Rangoon Bombing ........................................................................................... 11 Korean Air Flight 858 Bombing ............................................................................... 12 Transition to Criminality ............................................................................................ 12 Illegal Drug Manufacturing and Smuggling ........................................................... 12 Counterfeiting ............................................................................................................. 13 A History of Denial ..................................................................................................... 14 Impact ........................................................................................................................... 14 Part 2: North Korea’s Ruling Elite Are Not Isolated Executive Summary ................................................................................................... 17 Background ................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Brookings Institution Center for East Asia Policy Studies
    1 THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION CENTER FOR EAST ASIA POLICY STUDIES ASIA TRANSNATIONAL THREATS FORUM: COUNTERTERRORISM IN ASIA The Brookings Institution Falk Auditorium Tuesday, December 4, 2018 Washington, D.C. [Transcript prepared from an audio recording] * * * * * ANDERSON COURT REPORTING 1800 Diagonal Road, Suite 600 Alexandria, VA 22314 Phone (703) 519-7180 Fax (703) 519-7190 ATTF: Counterterrorism in Asia Center for East Asia Policy Studies, Brookings Institution December 4, 2018 2 PARTICIPANTS: Welcome Remarks: JUNG H. PAK Senior Fellow and SK-Korea Foundation Chair in Korea Studies, Center for East Asia Policy Studies, The Brookings Institution Keynote Address: YEONG GI MUN Chief, National Counter-Terrorism Center Office for Government Policy Coordination Prime Minister’s Secretariat, Republic of Korea Counterterrorism in East Asia: JOSHUA GELTZER, Moderator Visiting Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center AUDREY KURTH CRONIN Professor, School of International Service, American University MAYUKO HORI Chief Officer, Counter Terrorism Unit, International Safety and Security Cooperation Division Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan SAMM SACKS Cybersecurity Policy and China Digital Economy Fellow, New America Implications of Counterterrorism Policies: JEFFREY FELTMAN, Moderator Visiting Fellow, Foreign Policy, The Brookings Institution ZACHARY ABUZA Professor, National War College JAMES BAKER Visiting Fellow, Governance Studies, The Brookings Institution JI-HYANG JANG Senior Fellow, Asan Institute for Policy Studies * * * * * ATTF: Counterterrorism in Asia Center for East Asia Policy Studies, Brookings Institution December 4, 2018 3 P R O C E E D I N G S MS. PAK: Welcome to Brookings and thank you for being here. This is the event Counterterrorism in Asia. The Olympics last—earlier this year hosted by South Korea, and the next two Olympics will be in Tokyo and in Beijing, have really highlighted the issues of terrorism in East Asia.
    [Show full text]
  • Harvard Asia Quarterly Autumn 2001 1 HAQ CONTENTS
    Harvard Asia Quarterly Autumn 2001 1 HAQ CONTENTS HAQ Editorial Staff Editor in Chief Wai-Yin Alice Yu 4 Asian Perspectives on September 11 Harvard Law School Executive Editor China Ilya Garger Graduate School of Arts and Sciences 4 Jaime FlorCruz Managing Editor China’s Mixed Messages Cindy Zhou Is America’s Friend in Need a Friend Indeed? Graduate School of Arts and Sciences 6 Alastair Iain Johnston Production Editor The Pros and Cons of Cooperation Lisa Thomas Chung Harvard Graduate School of Design Beijing Weighs Its Options Photography Editor South Asia Lisa Thomas Chung Harvard Graduate School of Design 9 Rahul Sagar Of Hydra-Headed Demons Web Editor Matthias Lind The Indo-US Relationship Takes Yet Another Turn Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Southeast Asia Area Editors Sharri Clark, Central Asia 13 Kim Beng Phar Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Militant Semantics Caroline Cooper, China Graduate School of Arts and Sciences The Need for a Common Charter on Jihad Rebecca Culley, China Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Japan James Lee, Korea Graduate School of Arts and Sciences 16 Kenichi Asano Emily Parker, Japan Japan and America’s War Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Rahul Sagar, South Asia The LDP’s Hawks See a Golden Opportunity Graduate School of Arts and Sciences 17 Kazuyuki Katayama Sujata Barai, South Asia Harvard Law School A View from the Japanese Embassy Jin Pao, Southeast Asia Harvard Law School Afghanistan Associate Editors 19 Mary MacMakin Harvard Law School Collateral Benefits Melody Chu Ben Wilkins Women and War in Afghanistan Wei Zhou Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Sharon Chen Jay Fann Holly Gayley Julianna Lee 21 Four Expert Opinions on Terrorism’s Aftermath Harvard Divinity School Seong Lee 21 Interview with Jessica Stern Harvard Asia Quarterly Publishing Jihad International, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Arsenal of Terror: North Korea, State Sponsor of Terrorism
    H R N K Joshua Stanton Arsenal of Terror North Korea, State Sponsor of Terrorism ARSENAL OF TERROR NORTH KOREA, StatE SPONSOR OF TERRORISM Joshua Stanton THE COMMITTEE FOR H R HUMAN RIGHTS IN NORTH KOREA N K 북한인권위원회 Copyright © 2015 by the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea All rights reserved ISBN: 978-0-9856480-3-9 Library of Congress Control Number: 2015937031 ARSENAL OF TERROR NORTH KOREA, StatE SPONSOR OF TERRORISM Committee for Human Rights in North Korea 1001 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 435 Washington, DC 20036 (202) 499-7970 www.hrnk.org COMMIttEE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS IN NORTH KOREA (HRNK) BOARD OF DIREctORS Roberta Cohen (Co-Chair) John Despres (Treasurer) Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Consultant on International Financial & Brookings Institution Strategic Affairs Specializing in Humanitarian and Human Rights Issues Morton Abramowitz Senior Fellow, Andrew Natsios (Co-Chair) The Century Foundation Former Administrator, U.S. Agency for International Development Jerome Cohen Director, Co-Director, US-Asia Law Institute, Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs NYU Law School Executive Professor, The Bush School of Adjunct Senior Fellow, Government & Public Service, Council on Foreign Relations Texas A&M University Author of The Great North Korean Famine Lisa Colacurcio Advisor, Impact Investments Suzanne Scholte (Vice-Co-Chair) President, Rabbi Abraham Cooper Defense Forum Foundation Associate Dean, Seoul Peace Prize Laureate Simon Wiesenthal Center, Los Angeles Gordon Flake (Vice-Co-Chair) Jack David Chief Executive Officer, Perth USAsia Centre, Senior Fellow, The University of Western Australia Hudson Institute Co-author, Paved with Good Intentions: The NGO Experience in North Korea Paula Dobriansky Chair, World Affairs Council of America Helen-Louise Hunter (Secretary) Adjunct Senior Fellow, Belfer Center for Attorney Science and International Affairs, Author of Kim II-Song’s North Korea Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Distinguished National Security Chair, U.S.
    [Show full text]