Press
Showing 1941-1960 of 8297 Items
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How Kyiv’s Outgunned Defenders Have Kept Russian Forces from Capturing the Capital
“Ukraine’s main game is a game for time,” said Michael Kofman, director of Russian studies at the Center for Naval Analyses (CNA) in Arlington, Va. “To try to do something els...
By Michael Kofman
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New South Korean president to try a different tack with North Korea
For five years, South Korean President Moon Jae-in has cajoled his immediate neighbor to talk and encouraged cross-border exchanges. He has offered assistance to Pyongyang and...
By Dr. Duyeon Kim
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CNAS Welcomes Sarah Smedley, Cory Simpson, and Ryan Fedasiuk as Adjunct Fellows
Washington, March 14, 2022—The Center for a New American Security (CNAS) is pleased to welcome three new fellows—Sarah Smedley, Cory Simpson, and Ryan Fedasiuk—to a talented l...
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Experts fear political use of digital yuan
Beijing might have another motive in mind for its digital yuan: gathering transaction data. The e-CNY is a “data issue,” said Yaya Fanusie, Adjunct Senior Fellow at the Center...
By Yaya J. Fanusie
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Brazilian real leads declines in Latam with eyes on rate move
A Reuters poll sees the central bank raising its key rate by 100 basis points on Thursday and evaluate an escalation of its already aggressive policy tightening as red-hot glo...
By Rachel Ziemba
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Why India won’t condemn Russia over Ukraine
Putin, who didn’t bother going in person to the G20 or the Glasgow climate summit, declaredRussia worked with no other nation so closely. “It’s a deep relationship that goes b...
By Lisa Curtis
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Eyeing China, US Business Community Waits for Washington to Make Next Move
In the current climate, businesses would be wise to rethink their China strategy, said Martijn Rasser, a former senior intelligence officer at the U.S. Central Intelligence Ag...
By Martijn Rasser
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Russia's efforts to salvage economy could have devastating impacts
Russia's ties to the global economy are rapidly unwinding as crushing sanctions and the Kremlin's response upend decades of post-Soviet reforms. The Kremlin announced strict ...
By Emily Kilcrease
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The dangerous new phase of Russia’s war in Ukraine, explained
In 2014, Russia launched an invasion of Ukraine that culminated in the occupation of the Crimea peninsula in the south. Later that year, Russia deployed hybrid tactics, such a...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor
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Over Ukraine, Lumbering Turkish-Made Drones Are an Ominous Sign for Russia
“It is so perplexing, and no one is quite sure what went wrong,” said Samuel Bendett, an expert on the Russian military at the Center for a New American Security, a Washington...
By Samuel Bendett & Michael Kofman
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Ukraine War Ushers In ‘New Era’ for U.S. Abroad
The war in Ukraine has prompted the biggest rethinking of American foreign policy since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, infusing the United States with a new sense of mission and...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor
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The U.S. can’t stop Poland from giving Ukraine its MiGs
The fact that small Russian units have been so regularly ambushed in the early days of the war indicates they weren’t using small drones for surveillance and reconnaissance, i...
By Samuel Bendett
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Pentagon says some Russian jets are avoiding Ukraine's airspace during sorties to avoid being shot down
The skirting of Ukrainian air space suggests Russia warplanes are aware of these still considerable dangers. In an interview on Wednesday, an expert on the Russian military sa...
By Jeffrey Edmonds
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Bitcoin's 'tug-of-war' during Russia-Ukraine crisis stirs debate about the future
Reuters recently reported that Russian crypto owners were trying to liquidate billions in in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which has not levied sanctions against Russia. Yet...
By Jason Bartlett
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The West’s Economic War Plan Against Russia
Just as Vladimir Putin blindsided the West with the fact and ferocity of his invasion of Ukraine, the West blindsided Mr. Putin with the speed and aggressiveness of its retali...
By Edward Fishman
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Temperature on Korean peninsula set to rise after North's missile tests
North Korea's two recent ballistic missile launches were meant to test elements of its new long-range system, representing a "serious escalation", the United States has said. ...
By Dr. Duyeon Kim
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Cyber Command chief tells Congress chip shortage has national security implications
China’s increasing progress toward producing enough semiconductor chips domestically to avoid relying on foreign trade is a “very timely question” and one of “great concern fo...
By Martijn Rasser
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The Tangled Web We Wove Rebalancing America's Supply Chains
Washington, March 10, 2022—The pendulum of globalization has swung too far. What the fallout of the ongoing pandemic makes clear is that decades of offshoring and cost-cutting...
By Megan Lamberth, Ryan Johnson, Martijn Rasser & Henry Wu
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‘No off-ramps’: U.S. and European officials don’t see a clear endgame in Ukraine
When Russia first invaded Ukraine two weeks ago, the near-unanimous global assumption was that it would score a quick and easy military victory over its neighbor to the west. ...
By Jim Townsend
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North Korea Hints at Bigger Provocations as South Korea Elects New President
Just three hours after being declared the winner of South Korea’s presidential election, conservative former prosecutor Yoon Suk-yeol was reminded of one of the peskiest forei...
By Dr. Duyeon Kim