The idea
Places such as Afghanistan, Sudan, and Yemen are presented as strategic points of connection, not merely as isolated localities. The point is that these sites play a role in a broader network of movement and influence, and therefore their presence cannot be understood only through their national borders. This perspective makes geography an element of global politics, not a silent backdrop to it.
Concise formulation
Base locations: function as strategic points of connection
Its place in the book’s argument
This claim occupies an important place in the argument because it shows how the organization operates through scattered points linked to one another, rather than moving within a narrow national framework. Reading these sites as nodes in a single network helps explain the logic of spread and influence. Within the book, this supports the idea that conflict is managed at a level that exceeds the immediate local setting.
Why it matters
Its importance is that it prevents these countries from being reduced to marginal arenas or spaces cut off from the world. It also helps explain how the text sees the relationship between geography and politics as one of movement and connection. This adds an important analytical dimension to Arkoun’s reading of violence and contemporary organizations.
Brief evidence
Afghanistan, Sudan, Yemen, as points of connection and strategy Afghanistan, Sudan, Yemen, as points of connection and strategy rather than as a national movement
Reading questions
- What does it mean to describe these countries as points of connection rather than only local theaters?
- How does this description change our understanding of the spread of cross-border organizations?
Documentation level
High: the claim appears in a clear location in the book’s material.