Pak called a wild card in US intelligence report
November 22nd, 2008 - 12:38 pm ICT by ANI
- 
Washington, Nov 22 (ANI): The National Intelligence Council, an independent US Government body, has called Pakistan a wild card, whose northwestern territories will remain poorly governed, as cross-border activities continue to cause instability in nearby areas of Afghanistan.
The Global Trends reports, produced every four years by the National Intelligence Council, represents all 16 American intelligence agencies, in part to inform long-term thinking by new administrations.
The reports project various possible sequences of events in the future; the new publication notes, between dire forecasts, that bad outcomes are not inevitable.
According to a report Global Trends 2025 Afghanistan will remain an essentially tribally centred nation facing continual conflict. The future of Iraq does not look much better, the Daily Times reported.
China, however, is projected to emerge as the worlds second strongest economic power after the United States, while the latter will have less power in a multipolar world than it has enjoyed for many decades.
Russia has the potential to be richer and more powerful, but only if it expands and diversifies its economy, predicts the report.
US economic and political clout will decline over the next two decades and the world will be more dangerous, with food and water scarce and advanced weapons plentiful, the report projected.
The outlook is intended to inform US president-elect Barack Obama of factors that will influence global events. It is based on a year-long global survey of experts and trends by US intelligence analysts.
Thomas Fingar, chairman of the intelligence council and deputy national director of intelligence for analysis, said harmful outcomes were not inevitable.
It is not beyond the mind of human beings, or political systems, (or) in some cases (the) working of market mechanisms to address and alleviate if not solve these problems, Fingar told reporters. We could have a better world in 2025. (ANI)
Sphere: Related ContentRelated Stories
- ONIC releases 'Global Trends 2025: A Transformed World' Thursday - Nov 21, 2008
- China, India set to be leading powers by 2025: US intelligence - Nov 21, 2008
- American influence will fade by 2025: NIC report - Nov 21, 2008
- Al Qaeda could soon be on decline, having alienated Muslim supporters - Nov 21, 2008
- US may not be a global economic, military power by 2025: Intelligence panel - Nov 19, 2008
- India, China, US cooperation seen on sea lane security - Nov 22, 2008
- India seeking polar role in new world order: US study - Nov 21, 2008
- 'Strong relations with India, China major Bush legacy' - Nov 22, 2008
- Is Obama turning into a Narasimha Rao? - Dec 12, 2008
- China, India poised to become new world power centres - Feb 13, 2009
- National
- american intelligence
- barack obama
- economic power
- future of iraq
- global events
- global survey
- global trends
- government body
- intelligence agencies
- intelligence analysts
- intelligence report
- market mechanisms
- multipolar world
- national director
- national intelligence council
- nearby areas
- northwestern territories
- political clout
- publication notes
- wild card
Posted in National, |