Friday, June 8, 2012

Risk Management: The Future Significance of the Gulf Cooperation Council

GCC map
GCC map (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Future Significance of the Gulf Cooperation Council

By John Duke Anthony

DOWNLOAD "The Future Significance of the Gulf Cooperation Council" (.pdf)

The world today faces numerous challenges, including ongoing fallout from the international financial crises and instances of interstate conflict. Combined with the many changes affecting the regional and global balances of power these challenges raise questions about how power will be distributed in the coming two decades.

With this in mind, the Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research (ECSSR) held its 16th Annual Conference on "Global Strategic Developments: A Futuristic Vision" in Abu Dhabi in March 2011, and recently published the conference's papers. Available from the ECSSR through the link provided below, the volume provides a professional and academic investigation of the global challenges that lie ahead.

Dr. John Duke Anthony, Founding President and CEO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations, contributed an essay to the Global Strategic Developments: A Futuristic Vision volume on "The Future Significance of the Gulf Cooperation Council." Since its founding in May 1981, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) has often been misunderstood in terms of its nature, founding principles, and how it has evolved. Although only thirty-one years old, the GCC and its members' contributions to geopolitical dynamics are numerous and diverse. An examination of some of these geopolitical achievements is of special interest and value. Doing so provides insight into the prospects for additional accomplishments occurring in the future.

Dr. Anthony's essay on "The Future Significance of the Gulf Cooperation Council" is available through the link below. Download the article to read more about GCC involvement in regional issues including the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, the 1990-91 Kuwait Crisis, the 2011 Bahrain Crisis, and much else. Looking forward ten or twenty years, can the GCC countries be expected to play similar roles? Is it likely that, collectively or individually, the members would act to deny success to a non-GCC country that sought to intimidate or attack a GCC member? Dr. Anthony discusses these kinds of questions and more in his analysis of this unique and exceptional sub-regional organization.

DOWNLOAD "The Future Significance of the Gulf Cooperation Council" (.pdf) 


[ALTERNATE LINK]

This essay appeared in:
The Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research. Global Strategic Developments: A Futuristic Vision. Abu Dhabi: The Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research, 2012. 63-103. Print. 




FURTHER READING


DR. JOHN DUKE ANTHONY

Dr. John Duke AnthonyDr. John Duke Anthony is the Founding President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations, and currently serves on the United States Department of State Advisory Committee on International Economic Policy and its subcommittees on Sanctions and Trade and Investment. For the past 38 years he has been a consultant and regular lecturer on the Arabian Peninsula and the Gulf for the Departments of Defense and State. Dr. Anthony has served as an Adjunct Faculty Member at the Department of Defense's Institute for Security Assistance Management (DISAM) since 1974, and was an Adjunct Professor at the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service's Center for Contemporary Arab Studies from 2006-2011, where he taught a course on "Politics of the Arabian Peninsula."


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