
Carnegie India hosted the first discussion of the Security Studies Seminar on “Understanding Ceasefire Violations Between India and Pakistan.”

While New Delhi and Tokyo have identified regional cooperation across the Indo-Pacific as a major objective of their bilateral partnership, cooperation with ASEAN remains at the heart of their Indo-Pacific approach.

At this post–Cold War low in bilateral relations, the traditional guardrails that help stabilize the U.S.-Russian relationship are weakening, and nuclear risks are growing.

The past twenty years have seen repeated violations of nonproliferation, arms control, and disarmament agreements.

Almost all—if not all—nuclear-armed states have developed plans and capabilities for a range of nuclear response options.

How important is nuclear technology today for economic development and for implementing climate commitments?

This regular session pits expert judgment against the wisdom of crowds to forecast the global nuclear future—a notoriously difficult but necessary part of policymaking.

The UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons is now open for signature, but what real-world effects will it have on nuclear disarmament and international security more generally between now and 2030?

A keynote with Chairman, U.S. House of Representatives Armed Services Committee Adam Smith.

Thirty years of fueling debate, enriching policy, and initiating change.