France is repressive but not for the reasons that the journal notes. It is true that France first dealt with international terrorism with the Algergian situation in the 1950s. The real reason France has effective prosecutions though is that the Napoleonic tradition is more prosecutorial as opposed to English common law in the first place. Not surprisingly, in the war on terror France is a bad place to be a terrorist.
Jordan has enjoyed one of the quietest experiences, and lack of terrorist activities despite its easy access to some of the world's worst places for terrorism, but at what cost? The November 2005 al Qaeda hotel bombings in Amman provoked King Abdullah II so much that he has stopped the infiltration of terrorists from neighboring Iraq and Syria. Jordan’s intelligence service, the General Intelligence Department, is close to Sunni tribes in Iraq’s Anbar province. It also has a first-rate specidal forces unit and special operations training center.
Egypt has also been one of the most adamant about shutting down terrorists but for the U.S. our relationship with Egypt has done little other than providing terrorists with another reason to despise the U.S. The Muslim Brotherhood began in Egypt, and they have directly confronted the Egyptian Islamic Jihad so the country is no stranger to its dangers. Hosni Mubarak ruthlessly represses terrorist activity routinely tortures prisoners.
Singapore, 15% Muslim, has effectively combatted regional terrorist groups such as the al Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah. Since 2003 though the government aimed to rehabilitate arrested militants with volunteer clerics who counsel detainees and rebut extremist arguments. This is a potential area for the U.S., who is reportedly studying the idea, to explore more fully.
Russia has brooked no opposition since Vladimir Putin rose to the fore and counterinsurgency and counterterrorism have been his forte. Russia has ruthless attacking terrorists in Chechnya. Oddly, they promoted former rebel Ramzan Kadyrov to the presidency of the now largely peaceful region. The Russian tactics include the sacrifice of civilians if need be when attacking terrorists which would not work for Americans. Next to the largely pacified Chechnya, the neighboring regions of Dagestan and North Ossetia remain hotbeds for militants.
The U.S. can learn little from other countries and has to prosecute terrorists with fervor while protecting American liberties. This is no easy task and the road is long and difficult. None of the areas that are troublesome for terrorists provide a legal framework for the United States to build on. We are more concerned with the liberty of citizens, the safety of hostages, and even when dealing with international terrorists, we are more adamant to rule with the law than the governments of these nations are. Singapore provides the only possibility of a place where the U.S. could learn a thing or two.