Press
Showing 941-960 of 7978 Items
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Ukraine: Lessons for War in the Middle East and Taiwan
Western stockpiles of everything are down, from small ammunition to high-end precision munitions and air defense. Ukraine's allies are straining to catch up with demand. Becca...
By Becca Wasser
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What the U.S. Is Doing to Curtail Chinese Land Ownership
China has maintained the first aircraft was a wayward civilian weather balloon and has not been named by U.S. officials as the source of the others. Tom Shugart, a senior fell...
By Tom Shugart
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Gil Tenzer and Eric Traupe Join CNAS Board of Advisors
Washington, February 14, 2023—The Center for a New American Security is pleased to welcome Gil Tenzer and Eric Traupe to its Board of Advisors. "Gil and Eric bring valuable in...
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When Will the War in Ukraine End? Experts Offer Their Predictions.
Asked about the likely duration of the Ukraine war, analysts in the United States and Europe made similar predictions, with timelines running from months to years to “indefini...
By Michael Kofman
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U.S. Shoots Down Fourth Object as China Levels New Accusation
“We have probably reached peak media and political frenzy related to the PRC spy balloon,” said Jacob Stokes, a former Obama administration foreign policy adviser who is now a...
By Jacob Stokes
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U.S. Warns Ukraine It Faces a Pivotal Moment in War
But some analysts warned that neither Russia nor Ukraine is likely to seize a decisive military advantage in the foreseeable future.“It feels like we are playing for a long wa...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor
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China ‘Spy Balloon’ Wakes Up World to New Era of War at Edge of Space
Jacob Stokes, senior fellow for the Indo-Pacific security programme at the Centre for a New American Security in Washington, also suggested that surveillance may turn out to b...
By Jacob Stokes
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Can Putin Win?
“A repeat assault on Kyiv makes little sense,” Michael Kofman, an American expert on the Russian Armed Forces and a fellow of the Center for a New American Security, a Washing...
By Michael Kofman
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China Pulls Back from Global Subsea Cable Project as U.S. Tensions Mount
Alexandra Seymour, an associate fellow of technology and national security at the Center for a New American Security, said China’s ambition to own subsea cables through its th...
By Alexandra Seymour
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U.S. Poised to Further Tighten Technology Exports to China after Balloon Incident
Current and former security officials say the balloon, which the U.S. said carried antennas and sensors for collecting intelligence and communications, underscores the nationa...
By Martijn Rasser
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Senators Are Talking about Another Big China Bill
Among a long list of measures, it would have sent more military assistance to allies in the Pacific, bolstered development bank lending to replace Chinese investment in Latin ...
By Martijn Rasser
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DoD’s Clarified AI Policy Flashes ‘Green Light’ for Robotic Weapons: Experts
“The old directive basically [said], in order to get approval for certain systems, you had to go through this review process, but it didn’t explain how to do the process,” sai...
By Paul Scharre
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Is This the Face of North Korea’s Future Leader? Kim Jong Un Shows Off His Daughter
An official from South Korea’s Unification Ministry, who spoke on condition of anonymity according to department rules during a background briefing, said Kim Ju Ae’s repeated ...
By Dr. Duyeon Kim
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Frozen Afghan Funds Have Done Little to Sway Taliban
The U.S. has stepped up use of economic sanctions and asset seizures in the past two years as a foreign-policy mechanism against Afghanistan as well as Russia. In the case of ...
By Alex Zerden
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CNAS Responds: State of the Union 2023
Following President Biden’s address to Congress at the 2023 State of the Union, CNAS experts analyze key policy points from the speech and weigh in on the state of U.S. nation...
By Paul Scharre, Emily Kilcrease, Martijn Rasser, Katherine L. Kuzminski, Lisa Curtis, Carrie Cordero, Alexandra Seymour, Bill Drexel, Carisa Nietsche, Nicholas Lokker & Caleb Withers
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Earthquake Outweighs China in U.S. Navy’s Decision to Close Docks
A potential giant earthquake could trigger a series of large tsunamis and lead to landslides, land subsidence and widespread flooding -- which would have disastrous consequenc...
By Tom Shugart
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Military Briefing: What the West’s Shifting Red Lines Mean for Ukraine
Washington’s constant redefinition of which weapons systems would escalate the conflict serves a purpose, some analysts said. “The administration and European allies believe t...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor
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Rep. Houlahan on How to End the China ‘Hullaballoon’
Amid fallout from that Chinese spy balloon transversing the U.S. and the new GOP-led House hinting at broad spending cuts, lawmakers will need to figure out how to strategical...
By Jacob Stokes
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How Russia Is Surviving the Tightening Grip on Its Oil Revenue
The gradual ratcheting up of oil sanctions, which are designed to cut Russia’s oil export revenues without snuffing out a fragile global pandemic recovery, is a policy that an...
By Edward Fishman
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Atomic Strait: How China's Nuclear Buildup Shapes Security Dynamics with Taiwan and the United States
For more information or to schedule an interview with the report authors, please contact Cameron Edinburgh at [email protected]...
By Jacob Stokes