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April 25, 2011
The United States has committed $1.5 billion per year over five years in an effort to support development in Pakistan, a fragile, nuclear-armed state of almost 190 million people that is in the frontline of the struggle against Islamic extremism. So, how’s that working out?
Mar
18
2011
12:00—1:30 PM
March 09, 2011
Center for Global Development presents a brownbag seminar on
Creating a Place for the Future: Toward a New Development Approach for the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
Featuring
Professor Philip Auerswald
George Mason University
With discussant 
Professor Paula Newberg
Georgetown Univ...
Blog Post
February 18, 2011
Marc Grossman, a retired Ambassador and former Undersecretary of State, has courageously agreed to take up what the Brookings Institution’s Bruce Riedel has called “the worst job in the world”—Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. Grossman will be asked to fill the massive shoes of th...
WORKING PAPERS
February 11, 2011
Lifting American trade barriers to Pakistani goods could serve as a useful tool of U.S. foreign policy. Unfortunately, recent proposals to extend duty-free market access for Pakistani exports are extremly limited due to concerns about job loss in the U.S. textile industry. However, this study shows ...
Blog Post
January 24, 2011
This is a joint post with Wren Elhai.
Vice-President Joe Biden is way ahead of the U.S. foreign policy community on the basics of what the United States can do in Pakistan. Let’s review two things he said during his recent visit to Islamabad, speaking to reporters from the perspective of some...