Press Conferences / "Door Number Three" required in Iraq - current "stay or go" debate needs to be discarded
Thursday 26th June – 11:00 am
International Institute for Strategic Studies
5th Floor, Arundel House, 13-15 Arundel St, Temple Place, London, WC2R 3DX


Press release: Winning over Angry Young Men is key to enduring stability in Iraq

LONDON – In a new report titled ‘Iraq: Angry Hearts and Angry Minds’, The Senlis Council on Thursday called for a reengineering of the international community’s mechanisms for responding to global security crises. The Senlis Council, a security and development policy group with research platforms in the three main War on Terror conflict theatres – Iraq, Afghanistan and Somalia – has been undertaking a series of interviews looking at the root causes of the conflicts. The Council’s new research in Iraq demonstrates that current policies in the country are producing a generation of angry young men who are easy prey for recruitment to extremist insurgencies.

The new Iraq findings show one striking similarity with The Council’s previous research in Afghanistan and Somalia: the intense anger of the country’s young men. “This crescent of anger that runs through all three of the main theatres of the War on Terror conflict is not being effectively responded to,” said Norine MacDonald QC, President and Lead Field Researcher of The Senlis Council. “We need to win over these young men’s hearts and minds in order to starve the insurgents of recruits and support.”

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   Video Report: Iraq - Angry Hearts and Angry Minds Al-Quaeda interview
On the ground research in May 2008, after Afghanistan and Somalia, a third conflict zone - Iraq - led to the Iraq: Angry Hearts and Angry Minds report, and prompted The Senlis Council to consider an alternative approach to global security issues. The following clips were shown during the report release on 26 June 2008 in London.


Publication: Iraq - Angry Hearts and Angry Minds


Report
June 2008

The Senlis Council has maintained an operational base in the southern provinces of Afghanistan since 2004. Initially aimed at providing a firsthand view of the burgeoning opium trade, this local presence in Kandahar and Helmand has enabled us to develop an expertise in many of the issues associated with poppy cultivation.

A particular area of focus has been the resurgence of the Taliban, the movement’s increasing capacity to disrupt security around the country, and international responses to that threat. As the revitalised Taliban has entrenched itself, so the capacity of NATO forces to prevent the contagion from spreading has been increasingly challenged, and the inability of the international community to respond adequately to that resurgence exposed.

Building upon this foundation, The Senlis Council broadened its examination of other key theatres within the War on Terror, launching a research platform in Somalia – the first outside of Afghanistan – in March 2008.

On the ground research in May 2008 a third conflict zone – Iraq – led to this report, and prompted The Senlis Council to consider an alternative approach to global security issues. In this report we offer a Situation Report (SITREP) on Iraq, as well as the initial findings from a series of interviews conducted in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Somalia, and an examination of what we believe the study of the three conflicts tells us about current global security policy.


Download the report (7,8 Mb, PDF)