Articles & Multimedia
Showing 381-400 of 2917 Publications
-
The Right Time For Chip Export Controls
Convincing allies to follow suit on manufacturing equipment restrictions is imperative, as controls will be broader and have greater impact when executed in tandem with the Ne...
By Martijn Rasser & Kevin Wolf
-
Why Hong Kong Is Pushing for Its Own Central Bank Digital Currency
With Hong Kong likely to issue its electronic Hong Kong Dollar (e-HKD), this month, U.S. policymakers need to anticipate what a successful issuance of Hong Kong’s digital fiat...
By Emily Jin
-
How to Stop the Next World War
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has given us a glimpse of what the return of industrial-scale warfare would mean....
By Robert O. Work & Eric Schmidt
-
At $60, the Cap on Oil Prices Will Build Pressure on Russia
With the price cap, the G7 hopes that Russia’s war machine continues to hurt more than the global economy....
By Rachel Ziemba
-
What Success or Failure Would Look like for the Price Cap on Russian Oil
This initial price cap is just one arrow the G7 has in its quiver when it comes to depriving the Kremlin of its oil riches....
By Edward Fishman
-
Leading From the House on Foreign Affairs
Democrats' new leaders will be well positioned to build on this legacy and continue the Democratic tradition of muscular internationalism....
By Daniel Silverberg & Mariah Sixkiller
-
The Kadena Conundrum: Developing a Resilient Indo-Pacific Posture
This article originally appeared in War on The Rocks. The long-standing debate over whether the United States is prioritizing China and the Indo-Pacific region has reignited o...
By Stacie Pettyjohn, Andrew Metrick & Becca Wasser
-
How the Price Cap on Russian Oil Will Work in Practice
The price cap on Russian oil is a policy backed by the G7 designed to curb Moscow’s oil revenues. Since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February, the G7 has imposed...
By Edward Fishman
-
Xi Jinping in His Own Words
The contest between democracies and China will increasingly turn on the balance of dependence; whichever side depends least on the other will have the advantage....
By David Feith, Matt Pottinger & Matthew Johnson
-
To Designate or Not? Russia and SST Status
The United States is unlikely to expend its political and financial resources to impose additional secondary sanctions as part of its Russia sanctions regime...
By Jocelyn Trainer
-
Export Controls Give ASML and the Netherlands an Opportunity to Lead by Example. Will They Take It?
If the Netherlands adopted the U.S. controls, ASML and ASMI could continue most of their sales to China....
By Martijn Rasser & Dr. Jason Matheny
-
Around the Table with Jordan Hibbs
Around the Table is a three-question interview series from the Make Room email newsletter. Each edition features a conversation with a peer in the national security community ...
By Jordan Hibbs
-
COP27 in Egypt: Putting Human Rights on the Climate Agenda
Cairo hoped that COP27 would focus on its stated agenda: climate change adaptation. Yet it was human rights concerns—such as jailed pro-democracy activist Alaa Abdel Fattah’s ...
By Arona Baigal & Jocelyn Trainer
-
New US Export Controls Need Allied Support
Japan and the Netherlands must enact similar advanced chip controls to ensure they do not enable the very practices they denounce....
By Hannah Kelley
-
Relations between the US and France Are Worse Than They Appear
Macron’s visit shouldn't serve as a mask for differences in security, trade, and diplomacy between the two allies....
By Nicholas Lokker
-
With the Elections Over, the US-Israel Relationship Faces New Tests
Elections in Israel and the United States are over. Now, political passions must be quelled and leaders must choose to prioritize their nations’ national security interests....
By Jonathan Lord
-
Is Putin a Rational Actor?
Western leaders must try to make Putin realize, as he considers turning to his nuclear arsenal, that there can be no winners in such a conflict....
By Dr. Andrew Krepinevich, Jr.
-
Taking on China and Russia
Today Washington has chosen, perhaps by default, to compete with—and if necessary, confront—both Russia and China simultaneously and indefinitely....
By Richard Fontaine
-
Sharper: Chips
The reliance on semiconductor chips, from accomplishing everyday tasks to fighting wars, has placed them at the center of geopolitical decisions by leaders around the world. R...
By Anna Pederson
-
What We’re Getting Wrong about Veterans
The memories of combat are loud bells that clang and gong in every veteran’s head unexpectedly. The emptier you feel, the more their crashing sounds echo and linger....
By Christopher D. Kolenda