Contact Information: Contact: Rachel Friedman Rachel@newsandexperts.com
What Is the World's Riskiest Hotspot?
It's Not Iraq or Afghanistan, But Rather a Celebrity Vacation Haven
| Source: Sir James Mancham
TAMPA, FL--(Marketwire - October 9, 2009) - While most Americans are focused on conflicts in
Iraq and Afghanistan, primarily because we have troops in active combat
there, potentially significant threats to the U.S. are simmering elsewhere,
from China to Russia, from India to Pakistan -- and one of the world's most
secluded celebrity tourist destinations may prove to be the Cuba of the new
millennium.
That's the opinion of Sir James Mancham, the first president of an island
country called the Republic of Seychelles, a favourite vacation destination
for stars like Keanu Reeves, Sean Connery, Jodie Foster and Prince William.
Situated near the center of the Indian Ocean, Seychelles is a nation of 115
islands in the Indian Ocean, 930 miles east of mainland Africa, northeast
of the island of Madagascar. More importantly, it sits in a position that
makes it advantageous strategically in a military conflict for any
aggressor near the Indian Ocean -- China, India, Pakistan, Russia, and
North Korea -- who needs a refueling station for aircraft or a port for
ships.
"All the countries in the region have active embassies in Seychelles, while
the U.S. is conspicuously absent," Mancham said.
"I remember a time when Cuba was considered an inconsequential little
sandbar off the Florida coast, filled with casinos and showgirls," Mancham
said. "That is, until Marxists took over and the Russians deposited some
missiles there, a scant 90 miles from the United States. Suddenly, it
became a very important sandbar."
Seychelles was given independence from Great Britain in 1976, and Mancham
was elected its first president. A year later, Marxist rebels staged a coup
d'état, ousting Mancham from office. He escaped the country and lived in
exile for 20-plus years until the Cold War ended. He returned to Seychelles
as an elder statesman with a view to reunify his divided country.
Mancham, whose autobiography, "Seychelles: Global Citizen"
(www.paragonhouse.com) traces the roots of the country and how it has grown
into its strategic and diplomatic significance, believes that global
geo-politics is not a regional phenomenon. Instead, it is a complex, but
singular, tapestry. The slightest pulled thread in the Far East can have
wide ranging implications in the west.
About Sir James Mancham
Sir James Richard Marie Mancham was the founding President of the Republic
of Seychelles, which has become a strategic territory.