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Latest Analysis

    • Article

    Four Principles to Guide U.S. Policy Toward China

    • October 30, 2020

    While deteriorating U.S.-China ties would be distressing under any circumstances, the present situation is especially sobering when one considers its proximate catalyst: a global health-cum-economic crisis that should have occasioned emergency coordination between Washington and Beijing.

    • Op-Ed

    Obscuring the Occupation: A Visit to Hebron

    • October 29, 2020
    • Mada

    The push for the normalization of Israel’s position in the Arab world is far stronger than that of de-normalizing the Israeli occupation of Arab territories, which are illegal under international law.

    • Policy Outlook

    Reorienting China Policy By Working With Europe

    • October 29, 2020

    Europe and the United States have adopted new courses on China policy over the last four years. Yet actual results are still lagging behind China’s many actions and initiatives.

    • Op-Ed

    China’s Economy Isn’t Out of the Woods Yet. More Than Ever, Market Reforms Are Needed

    • October 29, 2020
    • South China Morning Post

    China’s success in recovering from the pandemic-induced recession faster than other major economies has not eliminated the uncertainties surrounding China’s growth outlook.

    • Sada - Analysis

    Interview with Moroccan Human Rights Activist Maâti Monjib

    Maâti Monjib is a Moroccan historian, political analyst, and human rights activist. Monjib, president and co-founder of Freedom Now, has faced an array of political charges since 2015 and been subject to digital surveillance by the state. Today, he faces new finance-related accusations, which he denies.

    • Q&A

    After the Border Clash, Will China-India Competition Go Nuclear?

    • October 29, 2020

    Asia’s two largest nuclear powers have never threatened each other with nuclear weapons. How much will the recent deadly border clashes between China and India change the security landscape?

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Will a New U.S. Administration Mean Change on Ukraine and Belarus?

    To anyone who has followed U.S. domestic politics and foreign policy for the past four years—and especially the last two years—of the Trump administration, the answer will be unambiguously “yes.”

    • Op-Ed

    A Coercive History Lesson From Vladimir Putin

    • October 29, 2020
    • Foreign Affairs

    Russia needs to restore, rather than erase, the memory of the millions of victims of totalitarianism and cease putting it in competition with the memory of those who fell in battle in World War II.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Podcast: What’s In Store for North Korea After U.S. Elections?

    • October 29, 2020

    Podcast host Alex Gabuev and Myong-Hyun Go, a research fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, examine the situation on the Korean Peninsula and possible impact there of the U.S. presidential election.

    • Strategic Europe

    Judy Asks: Is the U.S. Election a Make or Break for America?

    • October 29, 2020

    Joe Biden or Donald Trump? The winner of the 2020 U.S. election will inherit a deeply polarized society, a democracy under immense strain, and the weakened global standing of the United States.

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