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Your search for Douglas Jackson found 2 results.

Bangladesh vs India Positive Order in Public Sea
/reports/2017/bangladesh-vs-india-positive-order-in-public-sea
In the last five years, two international arbitrations have resolved decades-old maritime boundary disputes in the Bay of Bengal. The first, between Bangladesh and Myanmar, was resolved in March 2012 by the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS). The second, between Bangladesh and India, was resolved in 2014 by a tribunal of the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) in The Hague. An earlier CNA study analyzed the Bangladesh v. Myanmar case and its implications for future maritime disputes. This study follows that up with an overview of the Bangladesh v. India case history, a legal assessment of the ruling, and an analysis of the implications of the ruling for India-Bangladesh bilateral relations, maritime disputes in the South China Sea and elsewhere, and for U.S. oceans policy.
or the opening up of past decisions to appeal. Mark E. Rosen Douglas Jackson /reports/2017/DOP-2017-U-016081-Final.pdf /reports/2017/DOP-2017-U-016081-Final_Page_01.jpg /reports/2017/india%20map.jpg
Gaming Sea Based Multinational Operations
/reports/2016/gaming-sea-based-multinational-operations
CNA designed and conducted a table-top exercise (TTX) at the U.S. Pacific Command (PACOM) Amphibious Leaders Symposium (PALS) in July 2016 that explored seabasing operations and interoperability during future contingency operations. Using a scenario that revolved around a massive natural disaster striking a fictitious country in the southern Indian Ocean, the TTX strengthened relationships and improved mutual understanding among participating militaries. Military leaders from the 22 Asian, Latin American, and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) countries participating in PALS formed coalitions, planned how they would operate within these coalitions to provide relief, and assembled their forces to conduct humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HA/DR) operations. PALS participants contributed a broad range of sea-based capabilities and employed them in creative ways. This revealed areas of opportunity and friction that could benefit from discussion at future PALS, dialogue during bilateral military engagements, and inclusion in bilateral and multinational command-post and at-sea exercises.
/centers-and-divisions/cna/ow/gaming-and-integration DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT A. Approved for public release: distribution unlimited. 50 DRM-2016-U-014109-Final2 Douglas J. Jackson Daniel Powell Elizabeth