 Mae nesaf dr Samir Puri. Mae'r lectoraeth i ddechrau a ddechrau ar Llywodraeth King's College London. Mae gennym eu ddweud o'r rheswerth. Mae'r ddechrau yn ymgyrch ymddiadau, a'r ddweud o'r ddechrau yn ymgyrchau arall, ac yn ymgyrch ymddiadau. Mae'r ddechrau'r ddechrau ar gyfer maesidau a'r ddechrau arall. Mae'n bwysig o'r ddechrau ar y ddechrau. Mae'n ddweud o'r ddechrau ar y ddechrau ar y ddechrau grips o yelledau dopech gennym. The result is the practical experience in Islam around the war in the city in Ukraine, which I bring to direct on my research and my teaching in contemporary warfare, and I've got some experience working across experienced of Think on terrorism for the British government and I bring those experiences to teaching I can plug in the research and the work that King's does back to the departments I've worked in, but I can also provide a conduit, if you like, between the academic research and some of the practical responses to these problems as they're unfolding in the world today. One very recent example is a piece of work I've just finished for the Commonwealth Secretariat and that was to write a countering violent extremism strategy for the Commonwealth which is entering this particular space for the very first time. Policy-making bodies such as the Commonwealth never want to reinvent the wheel. They want to understand what's already been done, the hard-won lessons that previous generations of people have already accumulated in a difficult area such as countering terrorism. So I was able to bring some of the latest research, including research that's being conducted at King's to be able to inform the strategy writing process. My book, which I published in 2016, is called Fighting and Negotiating with Armed Groups, the difficulty of securing strategic outcomes. This book asks one very simple question which is quite relevant for a number of conflicts as they're unfolding around the world today. That question is how do governments manage security measures that they are bringing to bear on the problem with the possible political strategies that they're also exploring? For example, if you're engaging in negotiation with an armed group, there's a likelihood of needing to keep on security measures, military tactics, intelligence and policing and so on. Over the course of 10 case studies I examine the different ways in which governments around the world have dealt with this particular challenge, regardless of whether they're pushing for a military solution or a negotiative settlement. There's likely to be a mix of both approaches in any particular scenario.