Articles & Multimedia
Showing 1481-1500 of 3013 Publications
-
How China and the U.S. Are Competing for Young Minds in Southeast Asia
Business leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos last month warned that China has overtaken the United States in the development of artificial intelligence and other emer...
By Kristine Lee
-
We Can’t Tell if Chinese Firms Work for the Party
On Jan. 28, the U.S. Justice Department announced two indictments against China’s largest telecommunications company, Huawei, alleging that the company tried to steal informat...
By Ashley Feng
-
To Compete with China, Get the New U.S. Development Finance Corporation Right
By Dan Kliman: China’s economic statecraft advances its broader vision of a future defined by great power spheres of influence, rigged economic interactions, and creeping auth...
By Daniel Kliman
-
To succeed with North Korea, prepare for failure
Last year Kim Jong Un wagered that he could transform North Korea’s relations with the United States, South Korea and other powers. Despite months of flashy diplomacy, North K...
By Patrick M. Cronin & Kristine Lee
-
North Korea and America’s Second Summit: Here’s What Ashley Feng Thinks Will Happen
At the end of February, U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean Chairman Kim Jong-un will reportedly meet for the second time. The summit promises to be much like the fir...
By Ashley Feng
-
A Lack of Support Leaves the Reserves Broken
After spending ten years as an active duty intelligence officer with the Marine Corps, I transitioned to the reserves, specifically the Selected Marine Corps Reserve component...
By Margaret Seymour
-
7 Things America Can Do to Counter International Nuclear Threats
Fifteen years ago, the global effort to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons was dealt an enormous shock. In the aftermath of the dismantling of Libya’s nuclear weapons progr...
By Elizabeth Rosenberg & Neil Bhatiya
-
Here’s How Trump Can Make Better Use of Corporate Sanctions
The Trump administration’s decision, which went into force on Jan. 27, to lift sanctions on several companies owned by the influential Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, has pro...
By Peter Harrell
-
America’s Role in the World is Worth Debating
There is a growing debate in the United States about the utility of America’s allies and the United States’ role in the world. Should the United States retrench and play a les...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor & Rachel Rizzo
-
Preparing for a “Decent Chance” of Success and Failure with North Korea
In a presidential tweet on Wednesday, President Donald Trump sounded cautiously hopeful regarding negotiations with North Korea. “Decent chance of Denuclearization,” he announ...
By Patrick M. Cronin & Kristine Lee
-
What The US Army Should Learn From the British Army’s Punchy Recruiting Campaign
The U.S. Army will always face challenges recruiting the soldiers it needs, but an uphill battle is no excuse not to strive to do better —or learn from other countries' modern...
By Emma Moore
-
Considering Sanctions on Russian Sovereign Debt
As the new Congress begins, legislators will have to decide whether to place sanctions on new issuance of Russian sovereign debt. Last year, the Senate considered sanctioning ...
By Sam Dorshimer
-
Russia’s Resiliency Toolkit
By Rachel Ziemba: Russian authorities have loudly proclaimed their preparedness to face new sanctions, maintaining a defensive economic policy stance. If Russians are committ...
-
U.S.-India Relations: The Trump Administration’s Foreign Policy Bright Spot
It’s customary these days to lament U.S. relations with allied countries like Germany and Canada, or to worry about warmth with unfriendly ones like Russia and North Korea. Ti...
By Richard Fontaine
-
What Pressuring Russian Oligarchs Accomplishes
By Neil Bhatiya: As Congress and the administration consider measures to push back on Russian malign activity in 2019, they need to understand what little influence oligarchs...
-
China-Russia Cooperation Presents a Fresh Threat to the United States
By Ashley Feng: In early November, at the longstanding annual meeting of the Russian and Chinese foreign ministers, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said in order to co...
-
U.S. Russia Policy: Moving Beyond Sanctions
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor: As long as he is in power, Russian President Vladimir Putin is unlikely to substantively change his strategic calculus, despite Western economic pre...
-
What North Korea wants from the next US summit
Following their historic meeting in Singapore last June, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump are preparing for another summit in late February. Their...
By Duyeon Kim
-
The United States and Europe May Return to Common Sanctions Policies on Russia
By John Hughes: In the past two years, the United States and European Union have diverged from their unified approach to Russia sanctions, exemplified by the close coordinati...
-
Europe and the United States: A Diverging Approach Toward Russia?
By Rachel Rizzo: Over the course of the past two years, the U.S.-European relationship has gone from bad to worse. President Trump has repeatedly derided NATO allies, called ...