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Chicago Council on Global Affairs
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What did the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing accomplish, and what was unresolved? Council experts Raymond Kuo, Evan Medeiros, and Leslie Vinjamuri joined a live audience to examine what China's long-term trajectory means for American power and global stability. Watch the full conversation: bit.ly/4u9m4u5
While most Republicans echo US President Donald Trump's view that immigration negatively impacts the United States, a new Chicago [email protected] survey finds a majority of Americans feel differently.
Explore more data: bit.ly/4o6llY6
The Council is pleased to announce the winners of the America at 250 High School Essay Competition. Students from across Chicago and the Midwest submitted essays to share their vision for how the region can advance US global engagement as the nation marks its 250th. Read the essays: bit.ly/3Q3i6nI
In a new report for @belfercenter.bsky.social, Council Distinguished Nonresident Fellow on Defense and Security Kathleen Hicks takes a close look at the Pentagon's Replicator Initiative and examines why military innovation is so imperative. #[bit.ly/43MQAy1
"Xi's comments in particular tried to align the meeting with China's touchpoints of national rejuvenation and opening up, as well as nudging the US toward a G2 construct where Washington and Beijing take particular responsibility in guiding global affairs," @kuorum.bsky.social told @newsweek.com.
"A security dilemma only exists when both sides lack hostile or malign intent," argue the Council's Raymond Kuo, Michael Hunzeker, Mark Christopher. "It is debatable whether the United States and China are caught in such a dilemma. But China and Taiwan are not." bit.ly/4dhfcDy