Daesh, the so-called Islamic State, has again wreaked havoc and destruction around the world. Attacks in Paris, Beirut and against a Russian airliner flying over Egypt have sparked a clamour for our military forces to do more. Many are even suggesting thousands of U.S. or European ground-forces be dispatched to fight Daesh directly in Syria and Iraq.
In order to succeed, military action should only be used to support a strategic political plan to rid the world of Daesh and to ensure groups like it are no longer able to grow, recruit and function.
Such a multifaceted effort must accept that death-cult groups like Daesh do not operate in a vacuum. They may have been created and led by sociopaths, but they survive and grow by different means.
We need to understand and confront the political, social and economic disenfranchisement that has allowed terror groups to gain growth and sustainability. To resolve these issues, we need to confront the root-causes in Syria and Iraq, and then the wider issues around the Islamic world.
First in Syria where the civil war caused by the Assad regime’s brutal repression of its own citizens – with military support from outside countries – has led to the disenfranchisement of the vast majority of Syrians. Daesh has been able to take advantage of Assad’s murderous campaign and usurp the Syrian people’s hopes for democracy.
In Iraq, the Government of the radical Dawa Party has excluded Sunni groups from the political and economic process. It failed to follow-up on promises made after the so-called Sunni-Awakening that rid Iraq of Al Qaeda, and continues to roundup and jail Sunnis, while forcing Tehran-backed militias into Sunni communities. The government in Baghdad so disillusioned the Sunni communities, that Daesh was able to take over cities and towns across western Iraq and even threaten the capital.
Daesh and groups like it have taken these local political problems and matched them with deeper feelings of disenfranchisement in the Islamic world.
As the world becomes ever more interconnected and globalisation reaches almost every society, many parts of the Islamic world have suffered economic and social collapse after years of stagnation and lack of progress. Young people in these communities look to the great wealth of the Gulf and the vast opportunities of the West and they feel left behind.
Daesh exploits these feelings to recruit. It tells the vulnerable this is due to some conspiracy to undermine Islam and that the only way out is to join them
Without dealing with these complex political issues, no amount of military action will ultimately solve the problem. Instead of leading with the military, the strategy to defeat Daesh should be based around five key initiatives:
- the international community should coalesce around building a peace-process in Syria. This will not be easy and will need to be matched with a long-term rebuilding and reconciliation process that brings in all those forced to leave and ensure the country does not slip back into civil war;
- the international community should ensure that a full reconciliation process is started and sustained in Iraq to bring the Sunni community back into political and economic life. This will entail a wide review of the present constitutional settlement, ensuring that Iraq does not fall back into sectarian conflict;
- a significant economic and social regeneration plan for the whole Middle East and North Africa should be created, based on opening-up of education, markets and capital. It should focus on participation for the region’s youth to offer them the sort of opportunities many in the West take for granted;
- military action should only be used in a limited and targeted fashion. It should ideally be led by Arab forces who could remove the sociopaths without stoking further anti-Western feelings;
- political leaders in the region must offer a brighter future for their citizens. The people of the region must be shown a future that is better than the past, one that can strengthen their society and culture while offering wealth and opportunity for all.
Ridding the world of groups like Daesh will not be easy and it will take time. Without a well thought-out and fully implemented political, social and economic plan, we will fail, and be confronted by more attacks like those we have recently seen.
IMAGE CREDIT: Flickr/Alisdare Hickson
The post How to defeat Daesh appeared first on Europe’s World.
On 8 December 2015, the European Union and San Marino signed an agreement aimed at improving tax compliance by private savers.
The agreement will contribute to efforts to clamp down on tax evasion, by requiring the EU member states and San Marino to exchange information automatically.
This will allow their tax administrations improved cross-border access to information on the financial accounts of each other's residents.
UpgradeThe agreement upgrades a 2004 agreement that ensured that San Marino applied measures equivalent to those in an EU directive on the taxation of savings income. The aim is to extend the automatic exchange of information on financial accounts in order to prevent taxpayers from hiding capital representing income or assets for which tax has not been paid.
"The sharing of information between national tax authorities remains one of the fundamental elements of an effective fight against tax fraud and tax evasion. The EU is undoubtedly a leader in this field."
Pierre Gramegna, Minister for Finance of Luxembourg
The text was signed in Brussels:
The signature took place in the presence of Pierre Moscovici, commissioner for economic and financial affairs, taxation and customs, who also signed the document.
DecisionThe Council adopted a decision on 8 December 2015 to authorise the signature on behalf of the EU.
"The sharing of information between national tax authorities remains one of the fundamental elements of an effective fight against tax fraud and tax evasion", Mr Gramegna said. "The EU is undoubtedly a leader in this field."
The EU and the OECDThe agreement ensures that San Marino applies strengthened measures that are equivalent to measures in force in the EU. However, whereas the 2004 agreement was based on the EU's taxation savings directive, that directive has now been repealed. Directive 2003/48/EC was repealed on 10 November 2015 in order to eliminate an overlap with directive 2014/107/EU, which includes strengthened provisions to prevent tax evasion.
The agreement also complies with the automatic exchange of financial account information promoted by a 2014 OECD global standard.
The EU signed similar agreements with Switzerland, on 27 May 2015, and with Liechtenstein on 28 October 2015. It approved the conclusion of those agreements on 8 December 2015.
CoverageIt sets out to limit the opportunities for taxpayers to avoid being reported to the tax authorities by shifting assets. Information to be exchanged concerns not only income such as interest and dividends, but also account balances and proceeds from the sale of financial assets.
Tax administrations in the member states and in San Marino will be able to:
The EU and San Marino must now ratify or approve the agreement in time to enable its entry into force. Provisional application is scheduled for 1 January 2016.
The Council:
European Council meeting will take place on 17-18 December 2015 in Justus Lipsius building in Brussels.
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The Council:
Luxembourg's Pierre Gramegna, chair of Tuesday's meeting, calls the session to order
With the festive season comes all kinds of traditions in Brussels: mulled wine, Saint Nicholas, and another deadline for nations to strike a deal on a financial transactions tax.
But while last year ministers found themselves empty handed when a December deadline for an agreement rolled around, this year it’s different. Sort of.
As Bruxellois bought their sapins de noel (Christmas trees) on the pavement outside the EU summit building, inside another Sapin (Michel), the French finance minister who has been one of the tax’s biggest champions, was full of holiday cheer.
During a meeting of EU finance ministers, Sapin (the minister) hailed a breakthrough moment in the nearly three-year slog for an FTT, which would issue a levy on all stock and a derivative trades in the ten EU countries who are part of the scheme.
Could this Christmas miracle really be true? Could there really be a deal?
In practice, it’s more like half of a deal. Pierre Moscovici, the EU commissioner in charge of tax issues, found a convoluted combination of tenses to sum it up: “We have now the main parameters of what this FTT should be, and hopefully will be.”
Read moreThe President of the European Council, Donald Tusk received the letters of credentials of the following Ambassadors:
H. E. Mr Haymandoyal DILLUM, Ambassador, Head of the Mission of the Republic of Mauritius to the European Union
H.E. Mrs Oda Helen SLETNES, Ambassador, Head of the Mission of the Kingdom of Norway to the European Union
H.E. Mr Jawad Khadim Jawad AL-CHLAIHAWI, Ambassador, Head of the Mission of the Republic of Iraq to the European Union
Refugees crossing Greece's border with Macedonia wait to enter a camp earlier this week
The EU’s debate over how to deal with the ongoing refugee crisis has been so full of jargon and euphemisms that in can be nearly impossible for anyone outside the Brussels bubble to know what, exactly, leaders are actually discussing.
Such is the case with a draft communiqué for next week’s EU summit, circulated to national capitals on Monday. The document (which Brussels Blog got its hands on and has posted here) includes seven measures leaders would agree, if the draft is adopted. But all seven may be impossible to understand to those not following every twist and turn in the debate.
As a public service, Brussels Blog hereby offers a translation from eurocrat-ese into English of the migration section of the draft communiqué.
Read moreThe establishment of official relations between the Republic of San Marino and the European Community dates back to February 1983. The European Community and San Marino signed an Agreement on monetary relations in 2000. It entitles San Marino, inter alia to use the Euro as its official currency.