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MIT Covid 19 Hackathon

In the News

May 4, 2020

MIT Africa's Ari Jacobovits helps produce Covid-19 hackathon

Ari Jacobovits, managing director of the MIT Africa program, helped organize a hackathon on Covid-19 with collectives from around the world—drawing from universities, industry, government, and NGOs, among others.  CIS research affiliate Claude Grunitsky covered the story in his publication True Africa

National Committee on US China Relations logo

In the News

May 1, 2020

China's modern military strategy in historical perspective

NCUSCR Podcast

In an interview with NCUSCR President Steve Orlins, Taylor Fravel discusses his motivations for and key discoveries from writing, "Active Defense: China's Military Strategy Since 1949." 

In this Sunday, Sept. 9, 2018 file photo, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves after a parade for the 70th anniversary of North Korea's founding day in Pyongyang, North Korea. North Korea’s collapse has been predicted — wrongly — for decades. So it is no surprise that unconfirmed rumors that current leader Kim Jong Un is seriously ill have raised worries about what Washington and North Korea’s neighbors would do if things fall apart in any post-Kim North Korea. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)

In the News

April 30, 2020

Outsiders consider possibility of chaos in North Korea

Foster KlugAP News

Vipin Narang quoted: “The million-dollar question is: When do you invoke the OPLAN and what indicators do you rely on to do so? Because one country’s ‘securing the country’ operation can look to the other nation like an ‘invasion plan.’ And then all hell can break loose,” said Vipin Narang, a North Korea nuclear specialist at MIT.

Gold MIT seal logo

News@E40

April 29, 2020

SHASS Infinite Mile Award recipients in CIS

CIS is pleased to announce Alicia Raun and Fatih Basaga are two recipients of the 2020 SHASS Infinite Mile Awards. Award recipients are recognized for making exceptional contributions to their academic units, the School, and the Institute.

Kim Jong Un

In the News

April 29, 2020

Where is Kim Jong Un?

WBUR Here and Now

North Korea hasn't reported a single case of Covid-19 and the pandemic coincides with the absence of the country's leader, Kim Jon Un. Jim Walsh offers insight into the situation.

The head of the World Health Organization, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaking at a podium with the World Health Organization backdrop behind him

In the News

April 28, 2020

'War and disease travel together': Why the pandemic push for a global cease-fire is gaining ground

Deirdre ShesgreenUSA Today

Barry Posen quoted: "The disease caused by the coronavirus is weakening all of the great and middle powers more or less equally," he said. He said with no country likely to gain a meaningful military advantage from the pandemic, "the odds of a war between major powers will go down, not up." 

Screen shot of Yasmeen Silva, Jim Walsh, Joe Cirincione, Vipin Narang

In the News

April 28, 2020

Will the Covid-19 pandemic change national security?

Peter DizikesMIT News

As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to inflict huge damage around the world, international affairs experts are increasingly wondering: Will the virus make countries reconsider their national security strategies?

The NNSA's new mission logo for the W76-2 low-yield, submarine-launched, ballistic-missile warhead.

In the News

April 28, 2020

Low-yield warhead eliminates need for nuclear buildup, state says

Dan LeoneDefense Daily

Vipin Narang quoted: “What can the low yield [submarine launched ballistic missile] do that our current low yield nuclear systems cannot?” Vipin Narang of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology mused on Twitter. “Range and penetrate into downtown Moscow. Which doesn’t seem all that restrained.”

Aerial view of the Pentagon

Analysis + Opinion

April 28, 2020

Don’t classify the FYDP; Budget transparency helps allies, taxpayers

Miranda PriebeBreaking Defense

Unclassified information about DoD’s current plans will help the country weigh options such as sustaining the current defense budget, shifting priorities within it or significantly shrinking it by rethinking the US approach to the world.

person working on laptop with a globe on table

News@E40

April 26, 2020

CIS awards 17 summer study grants

Seventeen doctoral students in international affairs at MIT were awarded summer study grants. Each will receive up to $3,500. Sara Plana was awarded the first annual Guillemin prize.  “The awards were made to an outstanding cohort of MIT students from across the Institute. We're so pleased that the appeal of these grants has broadened and students are responding,” said John Tirman, CIS executive director and principal research scientist.

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