In-Person Event, Tomorrow at 2:30 PM: Join FPRI for a book talk and panel discussion to reflect on what the principles of 1776 demand of US leadership today.
Virtual Event on Tuesday, June 16, at 11:00 AM EDT: Join FPRI Eurasia Program Director Emily Holland and Senior Fellow Suzanne Loftus for a discussion on how economic and battlefield trends will affect Russia’s ability to wage war in the longer term.
🆕 In Season 3, Episode 2 of #TheTiesThatBind, Aaron Stein is joined by Member of the German Bundestag Roderich Kiesewetter for a discussion on Germany's new strategic defense document and what strength means in the new European security environment.
If you haven't yet, register for our upcoming in-person event happening this Thursday, June 4 at 2:30 PM.
In a piece for War on the Rocks, FPRI fellows Rebecca Pincus and David Marsh write about Chinese and Russian efforts at the poles, the inherent dual-use nature of polar systems, and where the US falls short in its polar strategies.
Suzanne Loftus notes that signing a premature peace agreement "would allow Russia to convert limited battlefield gains and structural weaknesses into a political outcome it has been unable to secure militarily and risk re-writing the European security architecture."
A chaotic and unpredictable international environment is characterized by renewed rivalries between major powers that exist today, where technology has shrunk decision time, blurred the balance of offense and defense, and added uncertainty. Read more in the Spring edition of Orbis.
This Thursday, June 4, at 2:30 PM EDT: Join us for an in-person book talk and panel discussion examining how the principles of 1776 continue to shape US power.
"It doesn't help if you have an army that doesn't fit in the decision-making processes, command and control cycles, or in the logistics of others. Strength also means complete interoperability and standardization" (10:05). Listen to the full discussion on #TheTiesThatBind.
My @fpri.bsky.social colleague -- the blogfather -- @armscontrolwonk.bsky.social and I sat down to discuss the Trump Administration's Nuclear Strategy Review and why we're on the precipice of more deployed nuclear weapons for the first time in a long time
www.armscontrolwonk.com/archive/1222...
Aaron and Jeffrey sat down to discuss the Trump administration’s review of nuclear strategy, the case for uploading, and what it all means for the [...]
The Foreign Policy Research Institute and the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs are pleased to introduce the Spring Issue of the Orbis Journal of World Affairs.
As Russia’s war in Ukraine grinds into its fifth year, and after significant escalation in recent weeks, this event will discuss how war has accelerated
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What does America’s founding vision demand of us today? And what will it take to sustain US leadership in the decades ahead?
Why are there more antennas on Svalbard than anywhere else on Earth? Svalbard of all places, where cats and childbirth are banned and there are more polar