Bush soon learned the wisdom of following official US policy on Taiwan. By 2003, he publicly opposed Taiwan’s plans to hold a referendum for fear that it would stoke pro-independence sentiment.
The World's Marco Werman spoke with Stewart Patrick, a senior fellow with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, about Biden's speech and how the US president used his platf

Policymakers have long fixated on preventing a catastrophic cyberattack by coercing and deterring adversaries in cyberspace. Yet cyber competition over the last two decades looks different than envisioned. Join us for a discussion with Michael Fischerkeller, Emily Goldman, and Richard Harknett, the authors of Cyber Persistence Theory, moderated by Carnegie’s George Perkovich.

Biden once scolded George W. Bush for pledging to defend Taiwan. Now he is making a worse mistake by chipping away at long-standing policy without a better alternative.
Danny and Derek welcome back Stephen Wertheim, senior fellow in the American Statecraft Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, to discuss his new article in Foreign Affairs, “The Crisis in Progressive Foreign Policy”.

Join Carnegie for a special event featuring Former Ambassador to Italy John Phillips, POLITICO journalist Hannah Roberts, along with Dan Baer and Rosa Balfour on the state of play in Italy's upcoming elections.

While Washington and Beijing focus on defense and security-related issues, the islands are demanding action on climate change.

American democracy is at a dangerous inflection point. The moment requires a step-change in strategy and support.

In his speech to the General Assembly, the president must emphasize that an open world order grounded in global institutions is the only viable path for peace.

Join the Carnegie Endowment for a special conversation on the climate crisis featuring New York Times writer David Wallace-Wells and Carnegie President Tino Cuéllar on the state of the climate crisis and the fight to preserve our future.