Articles & Multimedia
Showing 101-120 of 3004 Publications
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How Donald Trump Could Undermine the U.S. Dollar
The point here isn’t that sanctions can’t hurt the dollar — they can. But the real danger is misuse rather than overuse....
By Edward Fishman
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America Needs Clear Standards for China Tech Decoupling
This broad, virtually unchecked authority to ban Chinese apps and products resembles more of a loaded gun than a considered policy....
By Vivek Chilukuri
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A Fight Among China Hawks Could Imperil U.S. AI Dominance
Rolling the dice now on partnerships like the G42 deal could be critical to ensuring U.S. dominance....
By Daniel Silverberg & Elena McGovern
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It’s Time for a True Industrial Strategy for American National Security
For an industrial strategy to work, the president must make it a White House priority that pulls together all elements of national power....
By Becca Wasser & Mara Rudman
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Countering Election Falsehoods: Lessons from the Hurricanes
Give people the information they need to make an informed decision, and give it to them straight....
By Carrie Cordero
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Sharper: Allies and Partners
Amid intensifying geopolitical challenges, the United States is finding new ways to address security issues by cultivating and strengthening alliances and partnerships. How ca...
By Gwendolyn Nowaczyk & Charles Horn
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What Can the US Expect From Sri Lanka’s New President?
Washington views Sri Lanka as a “lynchpin” of its Indo-Pacific strategy and seeks a partner committed to strengthening the democratic process and economic governance while pro...
By Keerthi Martyn
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Wars Are Not Accidents
The road to conflict is an action-reaction process. Leaders decide whether and how to respond to a rival’s moves, and they often search for ways to lower the temperature. Esca...
By Erik Lin-Greenberg
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A Year of Anguish for the Hostages in Gaza—and Their Families
October 7 gave rise to unexpected bipartisan coalitions of D.C. experts and legislators who lent their knowledge to help U.S. hostage families and victims of the conflict navi...
By Daniel Silverberg
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On Alliances in Northeast Asia
For the U.S. alliances with South Korea and Japan to thrive — or merely survive — under the next administration, policy makers need to consider different options for different...
By Dr. Duyeon Kim
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Israel's New Rules of War
Netanyahu knows that there is no modern world. In the Middle East, there is only the continuation of the ancient. Despite technology, humankind has not morally progressed, eve...
By Robert D. Kaplan
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The Fury of History
Even manifestly unpopular regimes do not end on their own. There has to be a trigger....
By Robert D. Kaplan
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Around the Table with Hermes Grullon
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 ...
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Aiming higher: Accelerating US-Australia cooperation on precision-guided weapons
Both the United States and Australia have made deterring coercion in the Indo-Pacific the focus of their defence strategies and plan to do so by denying an aggressor the abili...
By Stacie Pettyjohn
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The Melting Fortress: The United States, Canada, and the Race Against Time in the Arctic
For years, Moscow has prioritized the Arctic as a critical pillar of its national security, opening or refurbishing over 50 military bases and scaling up military operations a...
By Andrew Spafford & Samantha Olson
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Do ‘good rebels’ exist in Myanmar?
Myanmar is experiencing unprecedented levels of conflict between the military junta, or Tatmadaw, and increasingly collaborative ethnic armed organisations (EAOs). In the past...
By Rowan Scarpino & Nathaniel Schochet
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Competition, Not Control, is Key to Winning the Global AI Race
The United States, with much of the world’s AI-enabling infrastructure, has positioned itself as the global leader in AI innovation. That might not be the case for much longer...
By Keegan McBride & Matthew Mittelsteadt
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Regulating AI Is Easier Than You Think
Countries can regulate AI from the ground up by controlling access to highly specialized chips...
By Paul Scharre
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Sharper: Drones on the Battlefield
From the battlefields of Libya to Nagorno-Karabakh to Ukraine, the deployment of drones has become a critical element of modern warfare. Will the explosion of unmanned aerial ...
By Anna Pederson & Molly Campbell
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How to Stop Rogue States Like Russia from Interfering in Our Politics
Democratic governments have done much to protect themselves in recent years. Still missing, however, is a mechanism for collective action....
By Richard Fontaine