News + Media
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In the NewsJune 16, 2020North Korea blows up joint liaison office with SouthRobin YoungWBUR Here & NowNorth Korea blew up an inter-Korean liaison office building just north of the heavily armed border with South Korea on Tuesday. The dramatic display of anger sharply raises tensions on the Korean Peninsula, and puts pressure on Washington and Seoul amid deadlocked nuclear diplomacy. Host Robin Young speaks with security analyst Jim Walsh about the implications. |
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In the NewsJune 12, 2020Russia, China and the US: Who has the best Middle East policy?Dale SprusanskyWashington Report on Middle East Affairs, June/July 2020, pp 58-59The Middle East Institute held an online discussion with two renowned scholars of international affairs on April 16 to assess the role of the US, China and Russia in the Middle East, which included SSP's Barry Posen. Here is a recap with some highlights and quotes from the event. |
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In the NewsJune 12, 2020Two years after Trump-Kim meeting, little to show for personal diplomacyDavid E Sanger and Choe Sang-HunThe New York TimesVipin Narang quoted: “Trump has told himself this was a win, and so has Kim,” said Vipin Narang. “Trump keeps repeating, ‘There wasn’t a war.’” “For Kim Jong-un it was also a win because he is able to take the air out of the maximum pressure campaign” to crush the country economically, he said, “while he is still expanding his missile and nuclear force.” |
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Analysis + OpinionJune 9, 2020Tension high, altitude higher: Logistical and physiological constraints on the Indo-Chinese borderAidan MilliffWar on the RocksAre India and China on the path to war in the Himalayas? Or will recent tensions over their disputed border fade into history like dozens of other standoffs that were resolved diplomatically? Aidan Milliff explores the issues in a recent War on the Rocks essay. |
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In the NewsJune 5, 2020Fingers, boots, and lines: Understanding the 2020 India-China border tensionsAnkit PandaThe DiplomatThe Diplomat’s Asia Geopolitics podcast host Ankit Panda speaks to M Taylor Fravel, the Arthur and Ruth Sloan Professor of Political Science and Director of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, about the ongoing India-China tensions along the Line of Actual Control. |
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In the NewsJune 5, 2020Pan-India News 18 poll on India-China standoff: Here’s what it means according to expertsParikshit LuthraCNBC-TV18CNBC-TV18’s Parikshit Luthra is joined by M Taylor Fravel, director of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Kanwal Sibal, former secretary, and Jayant Dasgupta, former Indian ambassador to WTO, to discuss about India-China relations and border skirmishes. |
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In the NewsJune 4, 2020Mattis calls out clearing protesters outside White House 'abuse of executive authority'Jeremy HobsonWBUR Here & NowFormer Secretary of Defense James Mattis has called the decision to clear peaceful protesters from outside the White House this week an "abuse of executive authority." Host Jeremy Hobson speaks with security analyst Jim Walsh about the incident. |
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In the NewsJune 2, 2020Philippines backs off threat to terminate military pact with USJason GutierrezThe New York TimesM Taylor Fravel quoted: “In light of China’s continued assertion of its historic rights in Vietnamese and Malaysian waters over the last year, Manila may have concluded that its previous rapprochement with Beijing would not protect Philippine interests,” said M Taylor Fravel, a political-science professor who is director of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. |
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Analysis + OpinionJune 2, 2020Why are China and India skirmishing at their border? Here’s 4 things to know.M Taylor FravelThe Washington PostHere’s what we know— and don’t know—about China’s recent actions in this long-standing territorial dispute. |
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Analysis + OpinionJune 2, 2020Integrating emerging technology in multinational military operations: The case of artificial intelligenceErik Lin-GreenbergTexas National Security ReviewLast fall, Perry World House hosted a two-day colloquium titled "How Emerging Technologies Are Rewiring the Global Order." The essays in this roundtable emerged from a panel on how emerging technologies like AI are changing international politics. Featured here is one of the essays by Erik Lin-Greenberg, who joins MIT this fall as an assistant professor of political science at MIT. |