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Foreign Terrorist Organization
The United States Department of State designates Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) as groups involved in terrorist activities, with the Secretary of State making the designation in consultation with the Attorney General and the Secretary of the Treasury. The designation process involves a 7-day waiting period after notifying Congress, after which notice is published in the Federal Register and the designation takes effect. FTOs may seek judicial review of the designation and can petition for revocation after 2 years, providing evidence that the circumstances forming the basis for the designation have changed. The Secretary of State may revoke a designation at any time, and Congress can also revoke a designation or set it aside by a court order.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.Israel Foreign Policy
- 2.Saudi Foreign Policy
- 3.Shipping industry
- 4.Ethnic tensions
- 5.Iran Foreign Policy
- 6.US Foreign Policy
- 7.Israel-Palestine Conflict
- 8.Sunni/Shiites Dispute
- 9.Yemen Houthis
countries
- 1.Yemen
- 2.Israel
- 3.India
- 4.Cyprus
- 5.China
- 6.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 7.Jordan
- 8.Lebanon
- 9.Oman
- 10.Pakistan
- 11.Palestine, State of
- 12.Saudi Arabia
organizations
- 1.Center for Strategic and International Studies
- 2.Counter Extremism Project
- 3.Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
- 4.Hamas
- 5.Hezbollah
- 6.Houthi
- 7.Israel Defense Forces
- 8.Moshe Dayan Centre for Middle Eastern and African Studies
- 9.Sanaa Center for Strategic Studies
- 10.Signal
- 11.Tel Aviv University
- 12.US Central Command
persons
- 1.Amos Yadlin
- 2.Ari Heistein
- 3.Badr Al-Busaidi
- 4.Ben Gurion
- 5.Benjamin Netanyahu
- 6.Constantin Grund
- 7.Dennis Ross
- 8.Donald Trump
- 9.Fabian Hinz
- 10.Hans Grundberg
- 11.Israel Katz
- 12.Jeremy Diamond