Belfer Center Home > Experts > Azeem Ibrahim

« Back to Azeem Ibrahim

Azeem Ibrahim

Azeem Ibrahim

Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

 

 

By Date

 

2010 (continued)

AP Photo

February 12, 2010

"A Successful Way to Prevent Future Terrorist Attacks"

Op-Ed, The Huffington Post

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"Part of the reason that perverted brands of Islam can be so influential is because too many high-profile figures who claim to be preachers of Islam actually have no religious qualifications, but attain their status by amassing notoriety and controversy. The most high-profile hate preachers in Britain in the last decade — Abu Hamza and Omar Bakri — are nothing more than self-appointed loudmouths, who drown out qualified imams who preach genuine Islam."

 

 

AP Photo

February 11, 2010

"Why It Would Be Wrong to Close Door on Foreign Students"

Op-Ed, The Scotsman

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"...[T]here are good reasons to have a healthy flow of foreign students in the country. Our strength is our openness. Reducing the number of foreign student visas is counterproductive. The United States tried it after 9/11 but has now reversed its approach, realising the harm it is doing. We can only remain an outward-looking and vibrant society if we remain open to the world beyond our borders. It is precisely many of these foreign students who will help their countries to reduce terrorism over the long run."

 

 

AP Photo

February 5, 2010

"50p Rate was Doomed as the Dome as the Rich are Able to Avoid Taxes"

Op-Ed, The Scotsman

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"...Labour knew it wouldn't bring in much money. They didn't really do it for the economics. They did it for the politics. The 50p band has symbolic value. They took polls about it in advance and found that asking the rich to contribute more would be popular."

 

 

AP Photo

January 30, 2010

"Cadbury Deal Need Not Leave Such a Bad Taste"

Op-Ed, The Scotsman

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"But the biggest rebuttal to this deal's critics is simple: it belongs to the shareholders. This begs the question of what those who oppose the deal want the government to do. Nationalise Cadbury? Pass a law to forbid it? The truth is that although these critics don't like the deal, they recognise that it will be a decision voted for, ultimately, by its shareholders. Since Cadbury has been a public company, anyone could buy shares in it, and the bald fact is that very few of those shares were owned by members of the Cadbury family. However much Gordon Brown and Peter Mandelson express their regret and determination to keep jobs in Britain, all parties know the decision is simply not up to them."

 

 

AP Photo

January 29, 2010

"How Visiting America Changed British Minds"

Op-Ed, The Scotsman

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"Where the inquiry can be the most fruitful, though, is in asking the former prime minister about how he managed to approve a war with such derisory postwar planning. Not even Mr Blair could assert that the years following the Iraq war went well. Many civilians were killed needlessly."

 

 

AP Photo

January 28, 2010

"Memo to Ministers: That's the Way to Do IT"

Op-Ed, The Scotsman

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"...[T]he culture in government needs to change from one in which IT projects are regarded as a panacea, to a more hard-headed culture in which they are an investment on behalf of the public, pursued only after rigorous cost-benefit analysis."

 

 

AP Photo

January 28, 2010

"Abolishing a Route into the Armed Forces"

Op-Ed, politics.co.uk

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"...[I]t is the flagship recruitment organisation for the future of our military. Senior military officers appreciate that some budget cuts are inevitable, but they are aghast one so significant will be not just scaled back, but abolished in its entirety. While the purpose of the OTC is to provide military and leadership training to future officers, it does much more than that. It also serves to create a civilian leadership more appreciative of the military, and who empathise with our troops."

 

 

AP Photo

January 19, 2010

"Government Can Help, But It's Down to Each of Us"

Op-Ed, The Scotsman

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"...[T]he point about the ability to spot opportunity and to make use of connections is that they are attitudes. That means everyone can learn how to develop them. The government can help break down barriers, but ultimately it is up to each of us to write our own success story."

 

 

AP Photo

January 14, 2010

"Banning Islam4UK is Playing into Its Hands"

Op-Ed, The Scotsman

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"And yet the media bear some responsibility. Not only do they give Islamists a very large platform to air their views, they also often make them seem more authoritative by referring to uneducated preachers as 'clerics'. That gives the impression that they speak for Islam, when in fact they only speak for themselves. A journalist would not dream of calling someone a surgeon or a general just because they had put on the right clothes, and yet they throw titles such as 'Muslim cleric' around like confetti."

 

 

AP Photo

January 6, 2010

"Tackling the Real Causes of Islamic Extremism"

Op-Ed, The Scotsman

By Azeem Ibrahim, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 2008–2010

"...[T]here is only one way to beat terrorism over the long term: reduce the motivation for young people to radicalise in the first place. It is no good trying only to dismantle terrorist networks. As the Christmas Day attack shows, a determined terrorist does not need a group to stage an attack — they just need the kind of know-how they can access online."

 

SUBSCRIBE

Get the latest research on the most important international topics

Receive email updates on the most pressing topics in international affairs and science.

Events Calendar

We host a busy schedule of events throughout the fall, winter and spring. Past guests include: UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, former Vice President Al Gore, and former Russian President Mikhail Gorbachev.