
Don't believe the hype about the decline of America and the dawn of a new Asian age. It will be many decades before China, India, and the rest of the region take over the world, if they ever do.

In an event hosted by the American Enterprise Institute, presented in collaboration with the Confederation of Indian Industry, Carnegie's George Perkovich discusses the priorities for U.S.-Indian Defense and Security Cooperation.

U.S. aid to Pakistan can ensure decisive action against terrorist groups only if it is explicitly conditioned on concrete and verifiable benchmarks which can be evaluated

The United States should support Pashtun and Baluch political aspirations in Pakistan and focus on countering the Islamist threat in Punjab rather than the threat posed by the Taliban.

An elected, democratic government and a national political consensus against extremism would increase the chances Pakistan can successfully confront radical groups.

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace hosted a one-day conference of officials and experts discussing current challenges and future prospects for Afghanistan and the region.

The Pakistani army needs to recognize the dangers of inaction against terrorism and confront it squarely.

Since acquiring atomic weapons, India, Pakistan and North Korea have not engaged in major warfare. But nuclear deterrence alone does not buy peace — diplomacy must keep the balance.

India's ambitious National Action Plan on Climate Change seeks to develop strategies for scaling up solar power, energy efficiency and switching to sustainable agriculture. U.S. collaboration and cooperation are key to achieving these goals.

Relations between India and the U.S. have improved in recent years, thanks in part to a “building block” approach that aims to build trust from the bottom-up. Carnegie hosted Ambassador David Mulford to discuss this relationship.