Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on AFGHANISTAN AND SELF-SUSTAINABILITY. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 15-page paper (including annotated bibliography) focuses on whether Afghanistan is ready for self-sustainability. Issues examined include education, infrastructure, job creation and community. Bibliography lists 7 sources
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTafghsust.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Regulatory Intelligence Database (2), 2007). Gates was pleased, he noted because Khowst had been, for years, a seat of insurgent activities (FDHC Regulatory Intelligence Database (2), 2007). The dramatic turnaround
represented good news for all concerned because it led to not only the quashing of insurgents, but also economic and civil development (FDHC Regulatory Intelligence Database (2), 2007).
The other good thing, at least from the U.S. point of view, is that the effort and cooperation between Afghanistans national government, the local
government and the provincial reconstruction team led to what Gates dubbed as "tangible results," which included a reduction in violence (FDHC Regulatory Intelligence Database (2), 2007). At one point, while
suicide bombs had gone of in Khowst once a week, on average, the average had dropped to once a month (FDHC Regulatory Intelligence Database (2), 2007).
Khowst represented more than simply reducing the number of suicide bombs going off, however. Khowst was successfully making the shift from a purely military operation into
a more holistic approach, which involved working with local leaders to build solid governance and infrastructure development (FDHC Regulatory Intelligence Database (2), 2007). As a result, during the past eight
months, Khowst has become a "model citizen," one in which the communitys quality of life has been improved (FDHC Regulatory Intelligence Database (2), 2007). The thought here is that when
quality of life is good and infrastructure is good and jobs are available, "extremism becomes a less attractive option" (FDHC Regulatory Intelligence Database (2), 2007).
Gates holds the belief that if there is success in Khowst, that success can spread to other areas of Afghanistan -- and even Iraq, given enough
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