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Najib Azad
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Join date: Jul 26, 2024
About
Najib Azad is a multifaceted individual with a diverse range of roles. He is a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, United States. In addition to his academic pursuits, he is a Post Juris Doctor, a seasoned politician, an accomplished author, a skilled analyst, a passionate advocate, a knowledgeable consultant, a dedicated researcher, and the esteemed founder and leader of the Bawar Movement, a prominent political party in Kabul. Previously, he held the prestigious position of spokesperson to President Ashraf Ghani.
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First Name
Najib
Last Name
Azad
Posts (27)
Mar 6, 2026 ∙ 5 min
Part I — Regime Change and Strategic Consequences: The Real Stakes of the U.S.–Israel War With Iran
A Tomahawk Land Attack Missile (TLAM) being launched from the USS Winston S. Churchill as part of Operation Epic Fury. Photo Credit: CENTCOM, X "eurasiareview" This piece originally appeared in EURASIAREVEIW on March 05, 2025 By: Najib Azad The United States and Israel have embarked on a profound new phase by launching direct military operations against Iran. Reactions have varied widely, from relief to concern and from celebration to fear. Yet, beneath these emotional responses lies a...
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Mar 3, 2026 ∙ 8 min
Pakistan’s Military Regime Is a Global Risk — and the Timing of Kabul’s Bombs Is Not a Coincidence
From the tribal lashkars of 1947 to the Taliban of today, the Pakistan Army has converted other people’s wars into its business model. The result isn’t just a devastated Afghanistan; it’s a standing threat to regional and global security. This piece originally appeared in EURASIAREVIEW on March 02, 2025 (Photo; AI generated) By: Najib Azad Pakistan’s military establishment has spent decades turning Afghanistan into a managed battlefield—an arena to be penetrated, pressured, and periodically...
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Dec 12, 2025 ∙ 6 min
Trump Can Call Afghanistan a “Hellhole,” But He Still Wants Bagram. Why?
File photo of Bagram military base in Afghanistan. Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons This piece originally appeared in EURASIAREVIEW on December 11, 2025 President Donald Trump has once again referred to Afghanistan as “a hell.” Two weeks ago, he called it “a hellhole.” The words made headlines, but they also exposed a contradiction few in Washington seem willing to confront. If Afghanistan is nothing more than a wasteland, an unredeemable pit of chaos, then why has Trump repeatedly spoken...
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