News + Media

 
screen shot of tv show m-s-n-b-c

In the News

May 18, 2020

Former inspector general: Trump is attacking the ‘institution’ of oversight

Lawrence O'DonnellMSNBC

Joel Brenner, who served as Inspector General of the National Security Agency under President Bush, tells Lawrence O’Donnell the firing of several inspectors general shows President Trump believes all government officials owe him “personal loyalty.”

screenshot of Joel Brenner with bookcase behind him being interviewed

In the News

May 18, 2020

Trump’s ‘highly unusual’ politicization of government watchdogs

Yamiche AlcindorPBS News Hour

President Trump has fired three inspectors general recently, including State Department watchdog Steve Linick on Friday. Yamiche Alcindor talks to Joel Brenner, a former national security inspector general and director of national intelligence, about how politicizing the IG role is “all wrong.”

Joel Brenner

In the News

May 15, 2020

Inspectors general: oversight, authority, and removal with Joel Brenner

National Security Law Today

Joel Brenner discusses the Inspectors General role during the Covid-19 crisis and Trump's removal on National Security Law Today.

Political cartoon featuring Godzilla monster but with Trump head blowing flames of tariffs decimating a city with the caption Trumpzilla

In the News

May 11, 2020

National security is in the eye of the beholder

Brad GlossermanJapan Times

Richard Samuels quoted: MIT Professor Richard Samuels describes this as the belief that societies must “organize to defend the wealth of individuals they comprise” — their skills, productive relationships, firms and R&D centers that create their wealth — and argues that this logic has long prevailed in Japan. 

Cartoon of President Trump using red China flag to bullfight a donkey

Analysis + Opinion

May 10, 2020

Can the democrats avoid Trump’s China trap?

Rachel Esplin Odell, Stephen WertheimThe New York Times

Democrats, and Republicans who truly put American security first, face a choice. Joe Biden in particular will decide whether to lead his party into Mr Trump’s trap or play a different game.

Drawing of cat on balcony overlooking apartment balconies

Analysis + Opinion

May 9, 2020

An ode to the humble balcony

Bernardo ZackaThe New York Times

It is private, yet public; exposed, yet secluded. It offers company without the demands of intimacy, and we should never take it for granted again, writes Bernardo Zacka in a New York Times opinion piece available here.  

President Trump pointing his finger in a salute boarding air force one plane

In the News

May 8, 2020

Trump wages a war on watchdogs as coronavirus elevates their importance

Liz GoodwinThe Boston Globe

Joel Brenner quoted: “It absolutely sends a chill through the whole community,” said Joel Brenner, former inspector general of the National Security Agency. “It’s a very clear message. The president doesn’t want any inspector general issuing any report critical of the administration and any inspector general who does it has to understand that he or she is likely to be out of a job.”

Photo of Kim Jong Un at funeral procession

Analysis + Opinion

May 8, 2020

4 things that will happen if Kim Jong-un died

Jim WalshThe National Interest

Should Chairman Kim exit early, there may be an opportunity to return to the negotiating table, especially given the North's precarious situation--one that is likely to deteriorate even further over the near to medium term, writes Jim Walsh in The National Interest's series asking what happens if Kim Jong-un died.

Yukio Okamoto

News@E40

May 7, 2020

Distinguished fellow and friend, Yukio Okamoto, felled by Covid-19

Yukio Okamoto, a Japanese diplomat and fellow at MIT, died from Covid-19 on April 24 at the age of 74. The former special advisor to two prime ministers of Japan joined the Center for International Studies (CIS) in 2012 as a Robert E Wilhelm fellow and served as a distinguished research fellow at CIS until his death.  

Ship on the South China Sea

Analysis + Opinion

May 7, 2020

Does the global pandemic open new South China Sea opportunities for Beijing? Not really.

M Taylor FravelThe Washington Post

A number of recent analyses have emphasized that China is seizing pandemic-created opportunities to improve its position in the South China Sea as other countries are distracted or otherwise unable to respond. A key implication of such claims is that absent the pandemic, China would have acted differently and perhaps with more restraint.

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