News + Media

TikTok building entrance

In the News

September 3, 2020

America’s problem is much bigger than TikTok

David WertimePOLITICO China Watcher

M Taylor Fravel quoted: This year’s annual Pentagon report on the People’s Liberation Army dropped this week and it’s “the most comprehensive and detailed one ever published.”

DF-41 intercontinental strategic nuclear missiles are reviewed in a military parade celebrating the 70th founding anniversary of the People’s Republic of China in Beijing on October 1, 2019. Liu Bin/Xinhua via Getty Images

In the News

September 2, 2020

China may double its nuclear arsenal in just 10 years. Don’t panic.

Alex WardVox

Vipin Narang quoted: “A doubling is not as scary as it sounds,” said Vipin Narang, a nuclear expert at MIT.  “China doubling over the next couple decades is kind of ‘it’s about time,’” said MIT’s Narang. “China is late to the game.”

In the News

September 1, 2020

Donald Blackmer, professor emeritus of political science and longtime leader at MIT, dies at 91

MIT News

An esteemed scholar and extraordinary steward of institutions and people, he was known to light up the academic landscape.

Donald L M Blackmer

News@E40

August 27, 2020

Donald L M Blackmer, Professor of Political Science Emeritus at MIT, dead at 91

Donald L M Blackmer, Professor of Political Science Emeritus at MIT, died on August 14, 2020. He was an esteemed scholar and an extraordinary steward of institutions and people.

Donald L M Blackmer and Astrid S Tuminez

News@E40

August 27, 2020

In memory of Donald L M Blackmer, 1929-2020

Tributes to Donald L M Blackmer from his colleagues and students are featured here. The photo left is of Blackmer and Astrid Tuminez (PhD '96) in New Hampshire, September 2018.

Chinese-held Subi Reef, a man-made island in the Spratly chain in the disputed South China Sea, is seen in April 2017. | POOL / VIA REUTERS

In the News

August 27, 2020

China fires missiles into South China Sea as US sanctions Beijing

Jesse JohnsonThe Japan Times

Vipin Narang quoted: “That they have been working on ASBMs and testing them isn’t a surprise,” said Vipin Narang, a professor of international relations at MIT. “But everything is now framed as a provocation.”

Competing territorial claims in the South China Sea involve several Asian nations as well as the United States.Credit...Ted Aljibe/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

In the News

August 27, 2020

China fires missiles into South China Sea, sending US a message

Steven Lee Myers and Keith BradsherThe New York Times

M Taylor Fravel quoted: “The growing frequency of exercises and the new types of capabilities displayed demonstrate the progress China has achieved in its military modernization drive over the past two decades,” said M Taylor Fravel.  He said that it was not clear if the missiles were fired at fixed or moving targets, adding that the latter would be “a better test of the overall system, to include identifying, tracking, and destroying a moving ship at sea.”

Headshot of John Tirman

In the News

August 26, 2020

America’s invasion of Iraq fuelled militant Islam

Morgan DuchesneyThe Star

John Tirman quoted: As John Tirman of MIT says, “Expediency (has) usually trumped principle in US foreign policy … The result has predictably, been a growing antipathy for America and its hypocrisies … The avatar of that antipathy has been militant Islam. We remain deaf to this lesson, at our peril.”

A Tokyo Tech student

In the News

August 18, 2020

Fostering friendships and films from across the globe

MISTIMIT News

What do you do when a pandemic shuts down international travel, and you can't do your internship in Japan? For MISTI students this summer, the answer was the Virtual Language Conversation Exchange with Tokyo Tech.

The California Army National Guard supported supporting humanitarian assistance to food banks during the COVID-19 crisis

Analysis + Opinion

August 17, 2020

Pandemic politics: Covid-19 and the US military

In addressing relationship between the US military and the COVID-19 crisis, it is important to note that there are two key questions: how can the US military affect the current national crisis and how is the crisis affecting the military? The military has been involved in messaging, logistics and direct support of communities affected by the pandemic. At the same time, the realities of living with an infectious disease are challenging basic assumptions about military budgets, force readiness and training.

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