News + Media

 
People watch a TV screening of a file footage for a news report on North Korea firing a missile that is believed to be launched from a submarine, in Seoul, South Korea, October 2, 2019. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

In the News

October 1, 2019

North Korea fires ballistic missile, possibly from submarine, days before talks

Joyce Lee, Chang-Ran KimReuters

Vipin Narang quoted: “The risk is that testing such a system causes the US to walk away before this weekend, but Kim probably bet that the US is so invested in the talks taking place and making progress ... that the US won’t walk away.”

Analysis + Opinion

September 30, 2019

Japan’s whack-a-mole foreign policy

Richard J SamuelsThe Boston Globe

Japanese leaders have recently faced a furious barrage of foreign policy and national security challenges, some of their own making. Each has presented itself as if a game of whack-a-mole—some in which the unhidden and unpredictable hand of President Trump has been prominent.

Joel Brenner, former inspector general for the National Security Agency. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

In the News

September 30, 2019

Former NSA inspector: whistleblower does not need firsthand information

Meghna ChakrabartiWBUR On Point

Joel Brenner spoke with On Point about the whistleblower complaint, "I think everybody in the intelligence community is extremely nervous. The president's been attacking the community, explicitly."

Hala Aldosari

Analysis + Opinion

September 29, 2019

Its monarchy has left Saudi Arabia fragile and unbalanced

Hala Al Dosari

Jamal Khashoggi and I came from very different backgrounds, and this shaped our views on the politics of our Saudi homeland. There were many issues on which we didn’t agree. But we did share one crucial belief: that untrammeled power is always a danger—and particularly in the case of Saudi Arabia.

Joel Brenner

In the News

September 28, 2019

A brief history of intelligence whistleblowing

Greg MyreNPR

Joel Brenner interviewed by NPR: As inspector general at the NSA in the early 2000s, Joel Brenner says he was allowed to operate independently and tackle sensitive issues. But he says it's also important to look into the motives of the whistleblower.

Richard Samuels presenting at the CG briefing

News@E40

September 27, 2019

CIS hosts consuls general meeting

The Center hosted Boston-area consuls general for a foreign policy briefing by our faculty and scholars. Local journalists were also invited. Seventeen consuls and officials attended the September 26 event at the Samberg conference center.

Joel Brenner

In the News

September 27, 2019

Joel Brenner: allegations that WH attempted to cover up Trump-Ukraine call records is "deeply troubling"

MSNBC

Joel Brenner, the former Inspector General of the NSA, said that if someone covered up information for personal gain during his time in the Bush Admin, they would've been "frog marched out of the building."

In this June 30, 2019, file photo, President Donald Trump meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the border village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone, South Korea. After two years in the spotlight at the U.N. General Assembly, North Korea this year is mostly an afterthought. The nation warranted only a single, rehashed sentence in Trump’s address and has been largely overshadowed by other standoffs and scandals. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

In the News

September 25, 2019

From focus to forgotten: Why no N Korea spotlight at UN?

Foster KlugAP News

Vipin Narang quoted in AP: “Incentives align on both sides,” Narang said. “That makes me think the low-key mention of North Korea, and the emphasis on Iran, was designed to keep the window wide open for working-level talks.”

Joel Brenner

In the News

September 25, 2019

GOP lawmakers invited to WH today

Chris MatthewsMSNBC Hardball

Joel Brenner interviewed on Hardball with Chris Matthews: I wanted to tell people who were focused on this quid pro quo business, about which people are spinning whichever way they want to, to focus instead on the sequence of events. 

A picture taken on June 18, 2018 in Geneva shows the United Nations Human Rights Council.

In the News

September 23, 2019

Saudi Arabia again under UN scrutiny as anniversary of Khashoggi killing nears

Zoe ToddFrontline PBS

Wilhelm fellow Hala Al-Dosari quoted: “It’s a good signal, basically, on a change in attitudes toward people and it really punctures this kind of narrative on modernization that Mohammad bin Salman is trying to convey — that he’s a new modernizer who is actually not bringing Vision 2030 as an economic reform. He’s bringing his shackles, you know, his family’s shackles and swords along with him.”

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