Word: expertly
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...picked up that December near Kandahar and taken into U.S. custody. Though known to U.S. and Afghan officials as a drug trafficker, he seemed an insignificant catch. "At the time, the Americans were only interested in catching bin Laden and [Taliban leader] Mullah Omar," says a European counterterrorism expert in Kabul. "Juma Khan walked...
...doing enough. Refugees complain they are rarely welcomed into a South Korean society that views them as unskilled communist rubes. If their integration is viewed as a dress rehearsal for the eventual reunification of the two Koreas, it isn't going well. Says Lee Jung Hoon, an expert on North Korea at Yonsei University in Seoul: "South Korea just isn't ready...
Since Sept. 11, say intelligence and counterterrorism experts, the U.S. and its allies have made significant strides in keeping al-Qaeda off balance. Better coordination among intelligence services around the world has led to several major busts, including the liquidation of the terrorist cell suspected of carrying out March's train bombings in Madrid. Western agencies that once ignored websites, chat rooms and other communications channels used by extremists are now tapping them effectively to pick up chatter. "They've gotten good at not only picking up possible messages between plotters but analyzing information more quickly to determine what...
...managing those vast resources. In 2003, it decreed that the state oil company, KazMunaiGaz, must be a 50% stakeholder in all new domestic oil and gas ventures. "This is not renationalization," says Martha Brill Olcott, senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington and an expert on the Caspian region. "This is re-evaluation. Kazakhstan is learning to play with the big boys. This is the Kazakh definition of national interest." The government's move doesn't necessarily amount to a Yukos-style power grab, but it still worries many Western oil executives whose companies have already...
...have accessory for terrorists; Home Affairs officials fear corrupt employees are selling passports. South African passports were among illegal documents found in a raid on a suspected terrorist safe house in London four months ago. "Other countries are already growing wary of our passports," says Anneli Both, a terrorism expert with the Institute for Security Studies in Cape Town. "Now they will think twice before letting us in anywhere...