In This Story
From the Cipher Brief:
Right before the Civil War, we had similar problems. I thought that was finished. Now I know, it’s not.
—Michael V. Hayden
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From the Hill:
As I write this, I am reminded that not once did I hear a fellow Senator say anything personally about him that was not kind. Trust me, a rarity then and even more so now.
—Ronald Marks
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From WOLA:
However,Ìýongoing effortsÌýof retired military officials, conservative elites, and members of the oligarchy to block such trials and co-opt the justice system threaten the future of these cases.
—Jo-Marie Burt and Paulo Estrada
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From the New Arab:
While political differences between the two countries are not expected to be resolved in the short term, the increasing level of economic cooperation emerging from the visit could prevent escalating tensions in the future if it leads to interdependence.
—Omid Shokri
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From the Hill:
Vaccine nationalism involves mostly high-income countries producing, buying and hoarding vaccines for their own domestic use to the detriment of other countries. Because the virus knows no borders, this is ultimately self-defeating because it provides the virus more opportunity to mutate.Ìý
—Kenneth Reinert
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From the Syndication Bureau:
This focus on rescuing Afghans presents some moral dilemmas.
—Ellen Laipson
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From The Cipher Brief:
It is this technology, when paired with adequate policy, that shields all sorts of classified information from eavesdropping or other forms of interception. It is also this technology which sadly seems to be little known among a rising generation of intelligence officers. That needs to change.
— Master’s in International Security Student Mason Goad
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From the Washington Post:
Now the stakes are higher. The hardliners believe that Youngkin owes them, and they will not afford him the indulgence he got as a candidate.Ìý
—Mark J. Rozell
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From The Cipher Brief:
However, any American policy predicated on economic decoupling and full-scale militarized containment of China is unlikely to work. The intertwined nature of the U.S.-China economic relationship, growing cost of military acquisitions, and uncertainty of continued U.S. economic growth threatens the viability of an economically separated, military-focused strategy based on outlasting China.
— Master’s in International Security Student Will Nelson
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From The Cipher Brief:
As the Biden administration formally creates itsÌý, observers are hopeful that it will include improved engagement that equalizes State Department and U.S. military visibility, confronts authoritarianism, and promotes technological investment on the continent.Ìý
— Master’s in International Security Student Winston Favor
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From Modern Diplomacy:
The Taliban is an example of how it is impossible to win a war against an organization that has a strong military and vast financial resources. On the other hand, security vacuums in Afghanistan have generated a favorable ground for TTP and an ISIS franchise, ISIS-K, to pose a threat to the Taliban, Pakistan, and Western world by engaging in terrorist attacks.
—Mahumt Cengiz, Asma Ul Hussna Durrani, and Andrea Quinn
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From the Cipher Brief:
The U.S. should focus on joint training exercises and knowledge gathering with partner forces in exchange for funding and support in the event of a conflict over the Arctic.
—Master’s in International Security Student Kieran Madden
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From the Washington Post:
Those issues include how race and sexuality figure into curriculums and what to do about remote learning, pandemic mask mandates and student gender identity in regard to school restrooms.
—Mark J. Rozell
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From the Hill:
If the Supreme Court upholds the Mississippi law and reversesÌýRoe, it is likely to discover a great truth about American politics: Once a right has been established, you can’t take it away without provoking a fierce political backlash. That’s true of gun rights, and it’s true of abortion rights.
—Bill Schneider