Alok Rashmi Mukhopadhyay

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Archive data: Person was Associate Fellow at IDSA from October 2003 to October 2010

Joined IDSA
October 2003
Expertise
European Union, EU-India Strategic Partnership, Radical Islam in the West, Terrorism Education, MA (German Studies), The English & Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad
Current Project
EU’s role in India’s Neighbourhood, NATO, Changing nature of Counter-Terrorism
Background
Mr. Mukhopadhyay is a regular contributor to print media and specialised websites on security and strategic affairs and has authored reports and Issue Briefs on crucial issues. He has frequently been interviewed by English, German and vernacular newspapers as well as consulted by foreign diplomats and experts. Mr. Mukhopadhyay was a Salzburg Seminar Fellow in June 2005. He has participated and presented papers in international conferences in India and Europe. He is also in the guest faculty of the Foreign Services Institute (FSI), Ministry of External Affairs, New Delhi.
Select Publications
“The Tale of a Troubled Time”, Strategic Analysis, Vol, 32, No. 5, September-October, 2008.
“The EU-India Strategic Partnership: From benign neglect to gradual acceptance”, Economic Papers 43, Warsaw: Institute for International Studies, Warsaw School of Economics, 2008.
“India-EU Strategic Partnership: Need for Multiple Bridges”, Indian Foreign Affairs Journal, Cambridge University Press, Vol. 2, No. 4, October-December. 2007.
“Radical Islamic Organisations in Europe: South Asia in Their Discourse”, Strategic Analysis, Routledge Publication, Vol. 3, No. 2, March- April 2007.
“Radical Islam in Europe: Misperceptions and Misconceptions” in Tahir Abbas (Ed.), Islamic Political Radicalism: A European Perspective, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2007.
“The Terror Scenario in Europe”, Strategic Analysis, Vol. 28, No. 2, April-June 2004
Other Publications
Associate Fellow
Email: armukhopadhyay[at]idsa[dot]in
Phone: +91 11 2671 7983

Publication

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EC President Barroso’s Visit to China

José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission, led a high-level team of nine European Union (EU) commissioners to Beijing on April 24 and 25, 2008, and met the Chinese leadership. Notable amongst the commissioners who accompanied him were the Commissioner for External Relations, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, and Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson.

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For EU, Trade Will Trump Tibet

The streets of Lhasa have started to become quiet once again. It would be just a matter of weeks if not months before the Forbidden City once again invites tourists to the roof of the world to experience ‘Tibetan culture’, the preservation of which has been one of the central demands of the demonstrators. Tibet would soon show its ‘normalcy’ to the world, with the Olympic Torch passing through it.

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Sino-German relations: Not all hunky-dory

The Sino-German bilateral relationship has run into rough weather in the last few weeks. What has been described as a relationship based on ‘strategic partnership’ experienced a big chill when the German Chancellor Angela Merkel met the Dalai Lama in Berlin on September 23. Chancellor Merkel seemed to provide at least two messages – one to her domestic constituency and the other to China.

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Hizb ut-Tahrir’s Jakarta Conference

The Caliphate Conference of Hizb ut-Tahrir (HuT) in Jakarta on August 12, 2007 brought together its global leadership from more than twenty countries. It reemphasized the establishment of an Islamic Caliphate and uniformity in governance in Muslim-majority countries of the world. The conference, which was attended by almost 100,000 supporters and sympathisers, is indicative of the increasing influence of the HuT in Southeast Asia. Another remarkable aspect of the conference was the sizeable representation of women among those who attended it.

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Tackling the Challenge Posed by Amateur Terrorists

After a month of global media frenzy, alliterative headlines, statements by senior politicians across continents, charges and rebuttals, the terrorist attempts in London and Glasgow appear to be finally gaining some concrete shape. The attempts, which coincided with the second anniversary of the July 7 terrorist attacks on the London Underground, and the subsequent arrests, present a changing trend. The most striking aspect of these failed terrorist attacks is the social and professional strata of the persons detained on charges of involvement.

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Galileo in Crisis

In October 2006, when India decided to pull out of the ambitious Galileo project, a global navigation system jointly developed by the European Commission (EC) and the European Space Agency (ESA), some Indian observers had expressed surprise that a long-drawn negotiation process within the ambit of the EU-India Strategic Partnership came to naught. Envisaged to be the most accurate and sophisticated navigation system thus far, the Galileo project has attracted the attention of developed and developing nations mainly because of its civilian focus and near perfect resolution.

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Radical Islamic Organisations in Europe: South Asia in their Discourse

In the European security calculus, terrorism has become one of the key strategic threats. Alarmingly, the continent has also become a centre of radical Islamist propaganda and activism, with a number of European countries worried over the potential of their own 'home-grown' religious extremists. Latest studies indicate a disturbing trend of a section of the youth, generally belonging to the Muslim communities of West African and South Asian origin from a poor or middle class socioeconomic background, embracing extremism and terrorism in Europe.

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The Third UK-Pakistan Summit: Issues and Concern

The Prime Minister of UK, Tony Blair, visited Pakistan in the third week of November to participate in the third UK-Pakistan bilateral summit. The UK-Pak joint statement of December 6, 2004 institutionalised such bilateral meets at the highest level, to 're-energise' the 'partnership for peace and prosperity in the 21st century'. As these bilateral summits are of a strategic nature and are being pursued without interruption since 2004, it is useful to analyse the scope and extent of such bilateral engagement.

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The EU-India Helsinki Summit

The Seventh EU-India Summit will be held on October 13th in Helsinki. The annual summits take place alternately in New Delhi and in the capital of the incumbent European Union presidency - at present held by Finland - under the existing framework of EU-India relationship, which was given the shape of a 'strategic partnership' at the EU-India Summit of 2004 in The Hague. The Joint Action Plan (JAP) adopted at the New Delhi Summit in 2005 was a comprehensive programme of EU-India engagement in the coming years.

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7/7: One Year On

July 7 marks the first anniversary of the 2005 terrorist attacks on London. These attacks and the thwarted ones on July 21 not only claimed the lives of more than fifty people of different nationalities, but once again brought to the fore a serious threat to global security, i.e., suicide bombing. The four suicide bombers, drawn from the Muslim community in Britain with South Asian and Caribbean origins, have left a permanent scar on the collective British psyche.