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Join the Carnegie Endowment’s American Statecraft Program for a conversation with Deputy National Security Advisor Mike Pyle. The discussion will address the Biden-Harris administration’s work on a modern American industrial and innovation strategy and diplomatic efforts to build broad international support. The conversation will be moderated by Carnegie nonresident scholar Peter Harrell.
Uncertainties abound as Ukraine begins its much-anticipated counter-offensive. Will it change the trajectory of the war or represent simply another phase in a lengthy stalemate?
And what New Delhi wants from Washington.
How could one imagine a post-war Ukraine? Stephen Wertheim is a Senior Fellow in the American Statecraft Program at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He's been watching the war in Ukraine unfold. But for some time he's also been thinking about what and whether a stable peace can be achieved.
Join the Carnegie Endowment and the Black Professionals in International Affairs for a joint special event on preparing young professionals for careers in foreign policy and how to navigate the network of opportunities in Washington, DC.
Washington may wish to be finished with the Middle East, but the Middle East is nowhere close to being finished with the United States.
The Palestinian national movement is in crisis. Divided between a Hamas-controlled Gaza and a Palestinian Authority that has lost credibility with the West Bank population it partially controls, the movement lacks not only cohesion but an effective strategy to bring about an end to Israeli occupation.
The agreement to merge LIV Golf with the PGA Tour is part of a broader 360-degree projection of hard and soft power designed to make Saudi Arabia a key player in the region and a pivotal one abroad with ties to all comers large and small.
U.S.-Indian cooperation has boomed in recent years, driven to a significant degree by rising tensions with China. Yet despite the optimism about the trajectory of U.S.-Indian relations, important questions remain unanswered.
Formal normalization between Israel and Saudi Arabia has been a longstanding U.S. goal. The questions, though, are how much that normalization is worth in today’s climate, what Washington should be prepared to pay for it, and what it should receive in return.