experts
Stephen Tankel
Nonresident Scholar, South Asia Program

about


Stephen Tankel is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment.

Stephen Tankel is an assistant professor at American University and was a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment in the South Asia Program.

His research focuses on insurgency, terrorism, the evolution of nonstate armed groups, political and security issues in South Asia, and U.S. policy responses to these issues. He has published widely on these issues and has conducted field research in Algeria, India, Lebanon, Pakistan, and the Balkans.

Tankel’s new book, Storming the World Stage: The Story of Lashkar-e-Taiba, is published jointly by Hurst & Co. and Columbia University Press. 


affiliations
education
PhD, King’s College London, MSc, London School of Economics, BS, Cornell University
languages
Arabic, English

All work from Stephen Tankel

filters
51 Results
In the Media
Security Assistance Isn’t the Quick Fix the US Thinks It Is

Policymakers must act now in order to improve the efficacy of security assistance and cooperation in order to advance American interests.

· August 6, 2015
Hill
In the Media
National Security and the Schoolhouse

Is scholarship relevant to the policymaker? Is the academy preparing people to go into the policy world?

  • +1
· May 20, 2015
War on the Rocks
In the Media
India in Afghanistan: Tackling a Thorny Issue

There is a lot to unpack in terms of how New Delhi and Washington each views Pakistan’s role in Afghanistan.

· April 20, 2015
War on the Rocks
commentary
The Indian Jihadist Movement: Evolution and Dynamics-Analysis

Indian jihadists have operated for decades, with and without support from Pakistan.

· September 10, 2014
Eurasia Review
commentary
Jihadist Violence: The Indian Threat

India has been confronting jihadist violence for decades. Yet these dynamics remain underexplored and difficult to comprehend, particularly in terms of ties to external jihadist groups.

· January 3, 2014
Wilson Center
In the Media
General Kayani's Legacy: Trying to Get Pakistan’s House in Order

The jihadist insurgency will continue to cause problems for Pakistan’s new Chief of Army Staff, General Raheel Sharif.

· December 4, 2013
War on the Rocks
In the Media
Killing Hakimullah Mehsud

It is very unlikely that the U.S. decision to kill Hakimullah Mehsud will significantly set back U.S.-Pakistan relations, but drone strikes will remain an impediment.

· November 6, 2013
War on the Rocks
In the Media
Going Native: The Pakistanization of Al-Qaeda

Given the addition of Pakistanis at senior leader levels in al-Qaeda, there may well be a continued growing focus on the insurgency in Pakistan and possibly on striking foreign targets in India.

· October 22, 2013
War on the Rocks
In the Media
Keeping Score in the War on al-Qaeda

Washington’s objective should remain the pursuit of a counterterrorism approach that enables the U.S. to manage and degrade jihadist groups without becoming captive to the threats they pose.

· October 1, 2013
War on the Rocks
In the Media
Jaw-Jaw and War-War in Pakistan

While the United States is fixated on negotiations over Syria’s chemical weapons, other talks of consequence were on the verge of beginning between Pakistan and the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan.

· September 17, 2013
War On The Rocks