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Should the Taliban be represented in Afghanistan's new government?
Share your thoughts in the forum.
Click to
read Colin Powell's speech today on settling the Arab-Israeli conflict.
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Algeria: An Ominous Case Study?
Listen
In 1991, after years of pro-democracy demonstrations, Algeria finally
held democratic elections. But when a hard-line Islamist party, the Islamic
Salvation Front (FIS), looked as if they would win the election by rallying
support among conservatives, the army stepped in and banned the FIS. For
roughly the next decade, the FIS waged guerilla war, and nearly 100,000
civilians were killed.
The fighting in Algeria has begun to diminish over the past two years,
but this month's deadly storms and poor economic conditions make Algeria
ripe for further Islamist activity. Could Afghanistan be heading down
the same dangerous path as Algeria if the Taliban are banned from taking
part in the government? What lessons does Algeria offer to the Islamic
world?
Guest:
Phillip Naylor, Professor of History at Marquette University
and author of "France and Algeria: A History of Decolonization and
Transformation"
Richard B. Parker, former ambassador to Algeria
Plus, Congressional Quarterly's David Hawkings on how the Congressional
agenda has been changed by Sept. 11th.
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