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Iran's Bomb

Terror Suspect Database

Taiwan's Presidential Elections and Cross-Strait Elections

Understanding Sufism

Iran's Nuclear Weapons Options

The Future (and Past) of the Good Friday Agreement

Russia After the Elections

Northern Ireland Peace Process

A World Challenged

The New Russian Diplomacy

Bearers of Global Jihad?

Iran's Trajectory After the Election

A Dinner with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili

Muslim Immigration, Muslim Organizations in the U.S., and Implications for American Foreign Policy and the War on Terrorism

How Much Help Has China Been To The United States Post 9/11?

Mike Lampton's USCC Testimony

Regional Security and Democratic Development in the Black Sea Region

A Meeting with the First Female Presidential Candidate in Russia

Developing a New Black Sea Security Agenda: Oil, Pipelines and Regional Security

The U.S.-China Relationship facing international security crises:  Three Case Studies in post-9/11 bilateral relations

The Nixon Center's China Studies Program proudly announces the publication of their most recent monograph.  Authored by David M. Lampton, Director of the China Studies Program at The Nixon Center, and Richard Daniel Ewing, former Assistant Director of the China Studies Program at The Nixon Center, The U.S.-China Relationship Facing International Security Crises is a timely and rigorous assessment of the extent of Sino-American cooperation with respect to three ongoing critical challenges America confronts.
Monograph Introduction
Monograph Chapters

America, Russia and the Greater Middle East: Challenges and Opportunities

The Nixon Center has recently released the monograph America, Russia, and the Greater Middle East.  Authored by Geoffrey Kemp, Director of the Regional Strategic Programs at The Nixon Center, and Paul Saunders, former Director of The Nixon Center. The monograph represents a unique convergence of two broader areas of study: the Middle East and US-Russian relations, providing a useful guide for US-Russian interaction in one of the world's most volatile regions.

Al qaeda: Status and future prospects

The Immigration and National Security Program hosted a luncheon at The Nixon Center on December 1, 2003.  Rohan Gunaratna and Marc Sageman spoke about the current status of the global Islamist network responsible for the attacks of September 11.  Robert Leiken, Director of the Immigration and National Security Program, moderated the event. html version

Islamist networks in the united states

The Immigration and National Security Program hosted a luncheon at The Nixon Center on November 19, 2003.  Rita Katz, Director of the SITE Institute, discussed the presence of Islamist extremists in the United States and the continuing threat they pose.  Robert Leiken, Director of the Immigration and National Security Program, moderated the event. html version

 

RealityCheck2.gif (560 bytes)
Where's the Debate?
ITNI Editor Nikolas Gvosdev argues that the United States is in a great need of a debate over its foreign policy, but the Democratic Party has yet to engage the current administration in a sincere debate.

Coming Full Circle
ITNI Editor Nikolas Gvosdev contends that that the Bush Administration's new and more realistic Iraq policy is closer to what the policy that should have been enacted initially months ago.

Baghdad and Beirut: Are There Analogies?
Director of the Center's Regional Strategic Programs, Geoffrey Kemp discusses the notion that the current situation in Iraq is comparable to the intervention in Lebanon during the Reagan Administration writ-large.

Beyond Criticism?
The National Interest Assistant Editor Editor Christian Brose evaluates the arguments put forth at the New American Strategies for Security and Peace Conference and argues that more substance, beyond simple criticism of the Bush Administration, will be needed for liberals to create a fully post-9/11 foreign policy vision.

RECENT ARTICLES & EVENTS

Georgia's Revolution of Roses

Zeyno Baran, Director of International Security and Energy Programs at The Nixon Center, writes that Tbilisi's peaceful transfer of power could herald more positive democratic things to come in the region if the US and the international community continues to support democratic reform. html version

Read the transcript of The Newshour with Jim Lehrer with Zeyno Baran discussing the events in Georgia.

Al Qaeda Attacks On Turkey

Zeyno Baran, Director of International Security and Energy Programs at The Nixon Center, held a briefing on the morning of November 21 to discuss the implications and political fallout of the recent terrorist bombings in Istanbul.

The Lesson from Istanbul: Terrorism Knows No Borders

Zeyno Baran, Director of International Security and Energy Programs at The Nixon Center, writes in Forward about the recent terrorist bombings in Turkey and how Turkey and the international community should respond.

US citizenship policy after September 11

The Immigration and National Security Program held a luncheon on November 13 at The Nixon Center to discuss the role of immigration naturalization in a world where there is greater emphasis on national security.

Corporations and terrorism

The Nixon Center held a luncheon on November 10, 2003 with terrorism expert Tim Spicer to discuss the role of the private sector in the war on terrorism.  The National Interest Editor and Nixon Center Senior Fellow John O'Sullivan moderated the event.

Taiwan's Trajectory and the Future of US-Taiwan Relations

The Nixon Center's Chinas Studies Program co-hosted a luncheon seminar with the Atlantic Council to discuss Taiwan, its upcoming elections, and relations between China, the US, and Taiwan. 

Ethnic Profiling and Homeland Security

The Nixon Center's Immigration and National Security Program hosted a debate on October 22, 2003 between Kate Martin, Director of The Center for National Security Studies, and Heather Mac Donald, Senior Fellow at The Manhattan Institute.  The two debated the role of ethnic profiling in the war on terrorism since September 11, 2001.  Robert Leiken, Director of The Nixon Center's Immigration and National Security Programs, moderated the discussion. 

Postwar Iraq: Geopolitical Challenges and Reconstruction

Director of Regional Strategic Programs at The Nixon Center Geoffrey Kemp was invited to give the 2003 Cairncross Lecture at St. Peter's College, Oxford on October 16, 2003.  This annual address is named after the former Master of St. Peter's, the distinguished British economist Sir Alex Cairncross.  A copy of his lecture can be found here.

The Crisis with Iran and the IAEA

The Nixon Center hosted a luncheon to discuss "The Crisis with Iran and the IAEA" on September 8.  Dimitri K. Simes, President of The Nixon Center, moderated the event.  Panelists included Geoffrey Kemp, Director of Regional Strategic Programs at The Nixon Center, Michael Eisenstadt, Senior Fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and David Albright, President of the Institute for Science and International Security.

Needed: A "Great convention"?

Nixon Center Strategic Studies Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev writes in  National Review Online about the growing inadequacies of the Non-Proliferation Treaty and considers the possible need for a new, more frank nuclear posture by the United States and its allies.

The Future Orientation of Russia: Let the Bids Begin

Nixon Center Strategic Studies Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev writes in EIPIC that the US must do more substantively if it wants to compete with China and Europe for Russian favor.

Advancing American Interests in the US-Russian Relationship

On September 22, The Commission on America's National Interests and Russia released its Interim Report, Advancing American Interests in the U.S.-Russian Relationship, at a press briefing at The Nixon Center. Co-sponsored by The Nixon Center and Harvard's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, the Commission made a number of important recommendations for U.S. policy toward Russia. Commission Chairman James Schlesinger and Co-Directors Graham Allison and Dimitri Simes presented the group's findings and recommendations.

Executive Summary 

Commission Statement

Full Report

Full Report in PDF

The "Stealth" Normalization of US-China Ties

Director of the Chinese Studies Program at The Nixon Center, David Lampton has written an article in the South China Morning Post, arguing that US-China relations are much stronger and more stable than often assumed.  Though the relationship will have its rocky moments, Washington would be wise to continue fostering ties with Beijing and treat China as the growing power it is.

Creating Peace Zones in Georgia

The Nixon Center's International Security and Energy Program held an afternoon meeting on Thursday, September 25 with Vakhtang Rcheulishvili, Vice Speaker of the Georgian Parliament and Chairman of the Economic Forum of Georgia.  He discussed the Georgia-US-Russia trilateral relationship.  Zeyno Baran, Director of the International Security and Energy Program, moderated the event.  Click here for a summary.  pdf

After the Summit: Time To Act

Nixon Center Strategic Studies Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev writes in The Moscow Times that the US and Russia must move beyond warm rhetoric and declarations and take substantive action to improve the bilateral relationship. 

“South Caucasus: Making the Best Use of External Assistance for Stability Building and for Co-operation with NATO”

On September 21, Zeyno Baran, Director of the International Security and Energy Programs at The Nixon Center, spoke in Vilnius, Lithuania on the strategic role of the South Caucasus.  Here is the text of her speech.

Funding Evil: How Terrorism is Financed -- And How To Stop It

On September 16, The Nixon Center's National Security Program held a luncheon with Rachel Ehrenfeld to discuss her new book, "Funding Evil:  How Terrorism is Financed and How To Stop It."  Zeyno Baran, Director of International Security and Energy Programs at The Nixon Center, also commented on the book and Fritz Ermarth, Director of National Security Programs at The Nixon Center, moderated the discussion.  Click here for a link to the discussion.

Azerbaijan's Presidential Elections

Zeyno Baran, Director of The Nixon Center's International Security and Energy Program, along with Nelson Ledsky of the National Democratic Institute, held a luncheon at The Nixon Center on September 11 featuring Azerbaijani Presidential Candidate, Isa Gambar.  Azerbaijan's election is on October 15 and Gambar discussed his prospects.  Click here to read the program brief for this event.

Benign Autocracy is the Answer for Iraq

Read The Los Angeles Times' (9/07) recent article, coauthored by Nixon Center Strategic Studies Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev, about the grim prospects for democracy in Iraq and what the US should do. 

THE REAL WORLD

Read The Boston Globe's (8/24) recent article about the role realism plays in the debate over US foreign policy.

Mexifornia

Robert Leiken, Director of The Nixon Center's Immigration and National Security Program, held a luncheon on August 20, featuring Victor Davis Hanson, author of Mexifornia: A State of Becoming, and Carlos Rico, Political Counselor of the Mexican Embassy.  Click here to read the program brief for this event.

John O'Sullivan Named Editor of The National Interest

John O'Sullivan

Top Journalist John O'Sullivan has been selected as the new Editor of THE NATIONAL INTEREST, the realist foreign policy quarterly published by Hollinger International and The Nixon Center.  Press release.

The US and Russia After Iraq

Paul J. Saunders, Director of The Nixon Center, and The Nixon Center's US-Russian Relations Program recently held a seminar to discuss the current status of US-Russian relations, how the war in Iraq affected those relations and what is needed to ensure strong relations in the future.  Click here for a summary of the discussion.

Time to Repair U.S.-Turkish Relations

Zeyno Baran, Director of International Security and Energy programs, writing in the Wall Street Journal.

U.S.-Turkish Relations Strained Further

Nixon Center Director for International Security and Energy Programs Zeyno Baran analyzes the impact of the arrest of 11 Turkish soldiers by the United States on the already strained U.S.-Turkish relationship.

CENTER DIRECTOR ANALYZES
U.S.-RUSSIA RELATIONS AFTER IRAQ

Writing in the June/ July 2003 issue of the journal Policy Review, Nixon Center Director Paul J. Saunders explains the reasons behind U.S.-Russian dispute over Iraq and outlines a strategy to develop closer relations with Moscow to advance important American interests.  Follow this link for the full text of the article.
 

 

Turkey's Competing Visions

The Nixon Center's International Security and Energy program recently held a meeting to discuss the U.S.-Turkish relations following the war in Iraq and the current dynamics of Turkey's domestic politics.  The panel included Prof. Ilter Turan (above right) of Istanbul Bilgi University and Dr. Ron Asmus of the German Marshall Fund.  Zeyno Baran, Director of the International Security and Energy program moderated the discussion.

Mexico's Illegal Alien Card: Should It Be Valid in the United States?

On June 12, 2003, The Nixon Center's Immigration and National Security Program held a roundtable discussion to analyze the rise of Mexico's "matricula consular" card.  The panel included Representative Tom Tancredo (R-CO), Marti Dinerstein, President of Immigration Matters and Policy Fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, and Mark Krikorian, Executive Director of the Center for Immigration Studies.  Click here for a summary of the discussion.

KEMP TESTIFIES BEFORE SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE 


Director of Regional Strategic Programs, Geoffrey Kemp, testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on June 12 on the repercussions of Iraq stabilization and reconstruction policies. Click here for his prepared statement.

 

Democratic Impulses Versus Imperial Interests: America's New Mid-East Conundrum

Nixon Center Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev and Ray Takeyh, professor and director of studies at the Near East and South Asia Center at the National Defense University, writing in Orbis.

China's Health Calamity: Causes and Consequences

On June 4, David Lampton, Director of the China Studies Program at The Nixon Center, held a panel discussion with Bates Gill, the Center for Strategic and International Studies Freeman Chair in China Studies, and Myron Cohen M.D., Professor of Medicine, Microbiology, and Immunology and Director of the Center for Infectious Diseases at the University of North Carolina.  They discussed the current SARS epidemic and the political and economic consequences.  Click here for a summary of their discussion.

The US-Russian Relationship After Iraq

On June 5, 2003, The Nixon Center held a dinner for Dimitry Rogozin, Chairman of the Russian State Duma Committee on International Affairs.  Mr. Rogozin predicted that the recent problems in the US-Russian relationship would heal as time passed.  However, Mr. Rogozin pointed out that the postwar management of Iraq was still a point of contention between Moscow and Washington and any true improvement in the relationship would require a more frank dialogue.  Nixon Center Dimitri Simes moderated the dinner.

China Studies Director David M. Lampton in the Washington Post:

China: Fed Up With North Korea?

(June 4, 2003)

“Turkey, Iraq, and the United States: Getting the Post-War Situation Right”
The Nixon Center's International Security and Energy program recently held a roundtable meeting to discuss the rebuilding of postwar Iraq and how Turkey's participation in the process will affect the future of U.S.-Turkish relations.  The panelists included Cengiz Candar, a veteran Turkish journalist and CNN-Turkey political analyst and Larry Diamond, Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution.  International Security and Energy Program Director Zeyno Baran moderated the discussion. Follow this link for a summary of the discussion.

The North Korean Nuclear Challenge and the Policy Options to Deal with It

The Nixon Center's Director of National Security Programs, Fritz W. Ermarth, and Director of Chinese Studies, David M. Lampton, recently convened a workshop to focus on formulating recommendations to policymakers to address the North Korean nuclear threat.  Presentations were made by Richard Solomon, President of the United States Institute for Peace; Henry Sokolski, Executive Director of the Nonproliferation Education Center; and Adm. Dennis Blair, Senior Fellow at the Institute for Defense Analyses.  

Terrorism and Restrictionism: 
Their Impact on European Immigration Policie
s

The Immigration and National Security program at the Nixon Center continued a series of roundtable meetings on immigration after September 11 with a discussion about European immigration policies by Patrick Weil, a professor of Politics at the Sorbonne University in Paris.  Mark Krikorian, Executive Director of the Center for Immigration Studies commented on Dr. Weil's remarks and the Nixon Center Immigration and National Security Program Director, Robert S. Leiken, moderated the discussion. 

 

Postwar Iraq Symposium



(Clockwise from the top left: 
Simes, Boyd, Telhami, Baran, Kemp)

On April 24, the Nixon Center held a roundtable discussion on the future for a post-Saddam Iraq.  The speakers included Gen. Charles Boyd USAF (ret.), President and CEO of Business Executives for National Security; Dr. Shibley Telhami, Anwar Sadat Professor for Peace and Development at the University of Maryland; Dr. Geoffrey Kemp, Director of Regional Strategic Programs, The Nixon Center; and Ms. Zeyno Baran, Director for International Security and Energy Programs, The Nixon Center.  Nixon Center President Dimitri K. Simes moderated the discussion.  Follow the links below for articles adapted from the meeting's presentations:

The Perils of Empire
- Mr. Dimitri K. Simes

Postwar Analysis: The Military Conclusions
- Gen. Charles Boyd USAF (ret.)

Aftereffects of the War in Iraq in the Middle East
- Dr. Shibley Telhami

Some Postwar Observations
- Dr. Geoffrey Kemp


Turkish-American Strategic Partnership on the Brink - Who Is to Blame?
- Ms. Zeyno Baran

 

China Studies Director David m. lampton in the Asian wall street journal:

China's Health Care Disaster


"A SHIFT IN CHINA'S LEADERSHIP STYLE?" - THE STRAITS TIMES , MAY 8, 2003

 

Georgian Opposition Party Leader Addresses 
Nixon Center

Mikheil Saakashvili, leader of the United National Movement Party, an opposition party in Georgia, recently spoke at the Nixon Center on stability in Georgia and discussed the upcoming Georgian elections. Nixon Center Director of International Security and Energy programs Zeyno Baran, moderated the discussion.  Follow this link for a summary of his presentation.

 

Nixon Center Scholar featured on 60 Minutes

Geoffrey Kemp, Director of Regional Strategic Programs, appeared extensively in a segment on Iran on 60 Minutes, Sunday, April 13.

 

China and Nonproliferation

Former assistant secretary of state for nonproliferation, now CSIS Senior Advisor, Robert Einhorn, discussed China's proliferation record and the progress that has been made thus far, as well as the steps that must be taken, to bring China into compliance with nonproliferation standards. Follow this link for a related article written by Mr. Einhorn for In the National Interest. 

 

Arab Democracy and American Security

The Nixon Center recently hosted a roundtable meeting to discuss post-Saddam Iraq.  The panelists included Nixon Center Director of Regional Strategic Programs, Geoffrey Kemp (middle left); Ray Takeyh, Director of the Professor and Director of Studies at Near East and South Asia Center, National Defense University (far left), and Dr. Thomas Carothers, senior associate and director of the Democracy and Rule of Law Project at the Carnegie Endowment (far right).  Nixon Center Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev moderated the discussion.

 

Director of Chinese Studies David M. Lampton Testifies on Capitol Hill.
Follow this link to read his testimony.


Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev Reacts to President Bush's Ultimatum in National Review Online

 

America, China, and Russia: The Trilateral Relationship 

The Nixon Center recently hosted a roundtable discussion featuring Dr. Christopher Marsh (above right), the director of Asian Studies at Baylor University.  Dr. Marsh focused his remarks on the American-Chinese-Russian trilateral relationship and how the perceptions that the countries have of one another affects their distinctive foreign policies.  Nixon Center Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev moderated the discussion.  Follow this link for a summary of the discussion. 


The 'Clash of Civilizations' and the war on Iraq

Former Deputy Secretary of Defense and Nixon Center Vice Chairman, Robert F. Ellsworth, discussed the aftermath of a war on Iraq and what happens next following the removal of Saddam Hussein.

 

French Toast: Paris Has Overplayed its Hand
By Damjan de Krnjevic-Miskovic

 

Profiling: Its Role in Immigration and Homeland Security

The Nixon Center's Immigration and National Security Program recently hosted a roundtable discussion on the role of profiling in immigration and homeland security.  The panelists included Dieter Grimm, a former justice of the German Constitutional Court and Jan Ting, former Assistant Commissioner at the Immigration and Naturalization Service of the U.S. Department of Justice.  Immigration and National Security Program Director Robert S. Leiken moderated the discussion.  Follow this link for a summary of the meeting. 

 

The Potential for Islamic and Iraqi Terrorism in the United States

The Immigration and National Security Program recently held its first in what will be a series of roundtable discussions on immigration after September 11.  Terrorism Expert Steven Emerson (right) discussed the potential for Islamic terrorism in the United States.

 

Follow this link for Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev's opinion pieces In:

- National Review Online
UN Talk

- the Moscow Times
Trans-Atlantic Putin.

 

Djindic & His Serbia
The Man and the Country He Left Behind

By Damjan de Krnejevic-Miskovic

 

Turkey at a Critical Juncture

Nixon Center Director of International Energy and Security Programs Zeyno Baran discussed the importance of Turkey in a possible war with Iraq and how this has affected U.S.-Turkish relations.  Morton Abramowitz, the former U.S. Ambassador to Turkey during the Gulf War, moderated the discussion. Follow this link for a summary of the briefing. html pdf (21k)

Follow this link for recent articles by Zeyno Baran in In the National Interest.

"From the Caspian to the Mediterranean: The East-West Energy Corridor Is Becoming a Reality"
(February 27, 2003)

 "Turkey's Difficult Balancing Act"  
(January 29, 2003)

 

"The Modernization of China's Military: Implications for American Policy"

The Nixon Center recently hosted a luncheon event featuring Dr. David Shambaugh  and the views expressed within his new book, Modernizing China's Military: Progress, Problems and Prospects. Follow this link for a summary of the event. 
html

 

EVOLVING U.S.-CHINA MILITARY TIES WITH CHINA AND TAIWAN

Former Defense Department official and current Director of the International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Dr. Kurt Campbell, assessed the state of US-China military relations and cross-Taiwan Strait ties at a recent Nixon Center meeting. Follow this link for a summary of the meeting.  pdf

 

GEORGIAN MINISTER OF STATE SECURITY SPEAKS AT THE NIXON CENTER

Georgian Minister of State Security, Valeri Khaburdzania, assessed Georgia's security concerns in the Pankisi Gorge and the autonomous region of Abkhazia at a recent Nixon Center event. Follow this link for a summary of Mr. Khaburdzania's address.

 

 

New Scholar to Launch Programs on Turkey, Energy

The Nixon Center is pleased to announce that Zeyno Baran, formerly Director of the Caucasus Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), will serve as Director of the Nixon Center's new International Security and Energy programs.  The programs will initially focus on the Eurasian region. 

 

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER SPEAKS AT NIXON CENTER 

At a recent Nixon Center luncheon, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian discussed upcoming elections in Armenia and security issues in the Caucasus. Follow this link for a summary of the meeting.


 

Managed Pluralism and Political Parties in Russia

Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev writing in Baylor University's Analysis of Events. Follow this link to the article at Baylor University's Analysis of Events website.

 

Don't Give Hussein the War He Wants: 
A Case for "More Time."

Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev writes on the importance of continuing intrusive inspections in Iraq to help delegitimize the pharaonic despotism by which Saddam's regime rules. National Review Online, January 27, 2003.

Key Isle
Cyprus, Iraq, and the war on terrorism.

A final agreement in Cyprus is essential in easing long-standing instability in the Mediterranean and could serve as a model for reconstructing a post-war Iraq, writes Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev in the National Review Online, January 14, 2003.


Will Middle East Democracy serve American Interests?

Geoffrey Kemp, Director of Regional Strategic Programs, discusses how democracy in the Middle East should be pursued to improve the lives of ordinary citizens yet, at the same time, could serve both regional and American interests in the long run. Follow this link for more articles by Geoffrey Kemp.

NIXON CENTER HONORS CIA DIRECTOR GEORGE J. TENET WITH ITS 2002 DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD

On December 11, The Nixon Center honored CIA Director George Tenet (above center) with its 2002 Distinguished Service Award in recognition of his lifetime of public service in intelligence and national security affairs. Center Advisory Council Chairman James Schlesinger introduced Director Tenet, who discussed America's war on terrorism in his keynote address. Former National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft (left) and former Nixon Foundation Chairman and Nixon Center Founding Chairman George L. Argyros (right)--now the U.S. Ambassador to Spain--presented the Award to the Director. President George W. Bush and former President George H. W. Bush each sent written messages praising his service as well. Follow this link for Director Tenet's remarks.  

IN THE NATIONAL INTEREST HOLDS IRAQ SYMPOSIUM.  "WAR ON IRAQ: WHEN, WHY AND AT WHAT COST?"

On Monday, December 9, 2002, In the National Interest held a symposium at The Nixon Center entitled, "War on Iraq: When, Why and at What Cost?" This gathering brought together a distinguished group of analysts and practitioners to evaluate the policies of the Administration and to project likely outcomes in the near future. It was chaired by the Honorable James R. Schlesinger, former Secretary of Defense, who is the chairman of the advisory council of The Nixon Center and the publisher of The National Interest, the two partners who co-produce and publish In the National Interest.

CENTER SCHOLAR FRITZ W. ERMARTH IN SUNDAY'S NEW YORK TIMES.

NIXON CENTER SCHOLAR ROBERT S. LEIKEN IN THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR  

FORMER AMBASSADORS ADDRESS U.S.-CHINA RELATIONS AT NIXON CENTER MEETING
Ambassador James Lilley, a Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and Ambassador Winston Lord, currently the co-chairman of the International Rescue Committee, assessed the current state of U.S.-China relations and gave their perspectives on the Bush-Jiang Summit.

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CAN DRIVE CHINA'S REFORMS
Nixon Center Nonresident Fellow Richard Daniel Ewing argues that better corporate governance in China will advance Chinese civil society and is vital to the nation's continued growth in this opinion piece for the Asian Wall Street Journal.

NIXON CENTER SCHOLARS IN THE WASHINGTON POST
Nixon Center President Dimitri K. Simes was quoted in the Washington Post on Friday, November 22 in an article entitled, "Russian Oil Fears Play in Iraq Policy."  
 

GRAHAM ALLISON AND ANDREI KOKOSHIN DISCUSS NATIONAL INTEREST ARTICLE AT NIXON CENTER DINNER.

Graham Allison (right), Director of the Belfer Center at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government and Andrei Kokoshin (left), the Director of the Institute for International Security Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, discussed their Fall 2002 National Interest article, "The New Containment", and discussed the U.S.-Russian alliance on preventing a WMD threat from terrorist organizations.  Fritz Ermarth (center), the Director of National Security Programs at the Nixon Center, moderated the discussion.  Follow this link for a summary of the meeting.

TO BE PRAGMATIC IS GLORIOUS
Nixon Center Director of Chinese Studies, David M. Lampton, discusses the relationship of strategic convenience developing between Presidents Bush and Jiang in this piece for Time Magazine Asia.

Does a New Generation of Chinese Leaders Mean New Policy?
On October 23, Wilson Center Visting Scholar Cheng Li discussed how the coming generations of Chinese leaders will affect U.S.-China relations. Follow this link for a summary of the meeting.

NEW ISRAELI AMBASSADOR TO THE UNITED STATES SPEAKS AT NIXON CENTER LUNCHEON
On October 2, new Israeli Amb. Daniel Ayalon spoke at The Nixon Center about the War on Iraq, terrorism, and the Arab-Israeli conflict.  Follow this link for a summary of his remarks.

BUSH'S CHANCE TO ENGAGE A NEW CHINA
David M. Lampton, Director of Chinese Studies at The Nixon Center, discusses the prospects for this month's meeting in Texas between Jiang Zemin and George W. Bush in the South China Morning Post, October 6, 2002.

 

Russian Foreign Minister Speaks After Meetings with Bush, Powell, Rumsfeld
Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov spoke to members of the Commission on America's National Interests and Russia--a collaborative project of The Nixon Center and Harvard's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs--and selected guests at a Nixon Center dinner chaired by former National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft on September 20.  Ivanov had just completed extensive discussions of possible American military action against Iraq with senior Bush Administration officials.  Follow this link to read his interview with In the National Interest Editor Nikolas Gvosdev.

A "NEW" SECURITY AGENDA REVIVES OLD TRADITION
Nixon Center Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev refutes the  claim by European commentators that President Bush's foreign policy strategy is a "departure" from American tradition and argues that it is in line with previous American policy in this op-ed in The Wall Street Journal Europe. October 9, 2002. 

AMERICA AGAINST THE WORLD?
In this op-ed, Geoffrey Kemp addresses whether the United States will be able to rally international support for a war on Iraq. Al Ittihad, September 1, 2002.

A PROPER RECKONING
 NATO EXPANSION
In this piece for the National Review Online Nixon Center Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev discusses the upcoming round of NATO expansion.

 

DUMA OFFICIAL DISCUSSES TERRORISM AT NIXON CENTER LUNCHEON
On September 23, The Nixon Center hosted a luncheon with former Minister of the Interior and current Duma member, Anatoly Kulikov.  Kulikov discussed international terrorism and Russia's own efforts in combating terror.  Follow this link for a summary of his remarks.

 

THE NATIONAL INTEREST 
EDITORIAL BOARD DINNER


The National Interest magazine's annual editorial board dinner took place at The Nixon Center on September 9. Among the distinguished group were Editorial Board Chairman Conrad Black (left), Editorial Board Co-Chairman Henry Kissinger (center), and Publisher James Schlesinger (right) as well as former National Security Advisors Brent Scowcroft and Zbigniew Brzezinski, and former Secretary of State Alexander Haig.

U.S.-CHINA RELATIONS IN A POST- SEPTEMBER 11TH WORLD


On September 18th, The Nixon Center held a luncheon meeting to release the monograph U.S.-China Relations in a Post-September 11th World, by David M. Lampton and Richard Daniel Ewing.  The discussion featured comments from both authors of the report as well as Dr. Kenneth Lieberthal a former National Security Council staff member during the Clinton Administration and current Professor of Political Science and Business at the University of Michigan. Mr. Ewing discussed the contents of the report while Dr. Lampton and Dr. Lieberthal reported their findings from recent interviews conducted with officials in China.  Follow this link for a summary of the meeting.
Press Release
   View the Report (102.3kb pdf) 

REALISM AND HUMAN RIGHTS


The Nixon Center and the Institute on Religion and Public Policy recently cosponsored a roundtable discussion on "Realism and Human Rights."  The purpose of the meeting was to explore what  the appropriate balance is between promoting a human rights/democratization agenda and ensuring the vital security interests of the United States. Center Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev (right) and Institute on Religion and Public Policy President Joseph Grieboski moderated the discussion.  Follow this link for a summary report on the meeting.

THE DANGERS OF WRITING TAIWAN A BLANK SECURITY CHECK
Nixon Center China Studies Director David M. Lampton cautions against making open-ended commitments to defend Taiwan that could encourage reckless conduct by Taipei.  Follow this link for the full text.

PIPELINES AND GRAND STRATEGY
In this article for Perihelion, an online journal run by the European Rim Policy and Investment Council (ERPIC), based in Cyprus, Nixon Center Senior Fellow Nikolas Gvosdev writes on the re-emergence of Russia as the principal supplier of Eurasian energy.  

IRAQ, AL QAEDA, AND KOSOVO: ONE RULE, THREE RESULTS?
The National Interest's Assistant Managing Editor Damjan de Krnjevic-Miskovic writes in the National Review Online on the realist case for war. The National Interest is co-published by The Nixon Center and Hollinger International, Inc.

AFGHANISTAN AND PAKISTAN:
 IS THE GLASS HALF EMPTY OR HALF FULL?


(From left to right: Lieven, Kemp, Strmecki, and Newberg)

At a recent Nixon Center meeting, a distinguished panel discussed the fragile political environments in Afghanistan and Pakistan and the role the United States must play in each country.  The speakers included: Anatol Lieven, Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; Paula Newberg, Special Advisor to the UN Foundation and the Center for International Cooperation, NYU; and Marin Strmecki, Senior Vice President, Smith Richardson Foundation.  Center Director for Regional Strategic Programs, Geoffrey Kemp, moderated the discussion. Follow this link for a summary of the meeting.

MEXICAN IMMIGRATION AFTER 9/11

The Nixon Center and the Center for Immigration Studies co-sponsored an August 6 breakfast briefing on the challenges of Mexican immigration to the United States after September 11.  Speakers included Nixon Center Guest Scholar Robert Leiken; Steven Camarota, Director of Research at the Center for Immigration Studies; and George Grayson, Professor of Government at the College of William and Mary.  Mark Krikorian, Executive Director of The Center for Immigration Studies, moderated the discussion.  The event was broadcast on C-SPAN. A summary of the meeting is available here.

FORMER NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE COUNCIL CHAIRMAN JOINS NIXON CENTER

The Nixon Center is pleased to announce  that Fritz W. Ermarth, a distinguished former official who has served as Chairman of the National Intelligence Council and Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Soviet and European Affairs, has joined the Center as Director of National Security Programs.  Follow this link for more information.

AL-QAEDA AFTER AFGHANISTAN


At a recent Nixon Center luncheon an expert panel on terrorism concluded that, although its principal base of operations was lost, Al-Qaeda retains its capability to regenerate—and the United States needs to upgrade its intelligence capabilities to counter this continuing danger.  Discussing the topic were (from left to right) Larry C. Johnson, CEO of BERG Associates and former Deputy Director of the State Department's Office of Counter-Terrorism; L. Paul Bremer, Chairman and CEO of Marsh Crisis Consulting and former Chairman of the National Commission on Terrorism, who moderated the event; and Nikolas K. Gvosdev, the Center's Senior Fellow in Strategic Studies and Executive Editor of The National Interest. The event was reported in an article in Business Week Online, August 1, 2002.  Follow this link for a summary of the meeting.  (pdf 23k)

KEMP TESTIFIES BEFORE SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE 
Director of Regional Strategic Programs, Geoffrey Kemp, testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on July 31 on the regional considerations for a war with Iraq. Click here for his prepared statement.

CENTER PRESIDENT SHARES OBSERVATIONS
FROM MOSCOW


Recently returned from meeting with senior Russian officials, opposition leaders, and political analysts in Moscow, Nixon Center President Dimitri K. Simes (above right) gave his impressions of developments in Russian foreign and domestic policy at a July 17 Center luncheon.  Among other observations, Mr. Simes explained that Russia's desire to be a "junior partner" to the United States was based not on shared values, but on a pragmatic view of Russia's own interests.  General Brent Scowcroft (left), a Center Board member, moderated the event.  Click here for a summary of the meeting.  (pdf 21k)

A NEW RESOURCE IN THE WAR AGAINST TERRORISM?
In this article for the History News Service, Senior Fellow Nikolas K. Gvosdev (right) and Anthony A. Cipriano argue that the revival of privateering could provide an important boost to the war against terror.  And in this Moscow Times piece, Dr. Gvosdev pushes Congress to clean out Cold War era legislation that hampers closer U.S.-Russia ties.  July 9, 2002.

LONDON WORKSHOP: IRAQ AND WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION
The Nixon Center recently cohosted a workshop in London with the International Institute for Strategic Studies and the Institut Francais des Relationes Internationales (IFRI) on "Iraq and Weapons of Mass Destruction," with participants from the U.S., Europe, and the Middle East.  Follow this link for a summary of the discussions.

YUKOS OIL CEO OPTIMISTIC ON U.S-RUSSIAN ENERGY COOPERATION


At a recent Nixon Center dinner, Mikhail Khodorkovsky (above left), CEO of Russia's second largest oil company, Yukos, advocated expanded U.S.-Russian energy cooperation and discussed the future of the oil and gas industries in Russia. Mr. Khodorkovsky spoke as a Yukos oil shipment headed toward the United States in what he described as a major test of the profitability of direct transit of Russian oil to America.  James Schlesinger (right), Chairman of the Nixon Center Advisory Council and a former Secretary of Energy, chaired the meeting.  June 20, 2002.  (pdf 21k)

RUDMAN ADDRESSES HOMELAND SECURITY REORGANIZATION


One day before he testifies to Congress on the Bush Administration's proposal to create a Department of Homeland Security, former Senator Warren B. Rudman (right), Co-Chairman of The United States Commission on National Security/21st Century, addressed the challenge of defending the United States at a Nixon Center luncheon.  Please check back soon for a summary of Senator Rudman's remarks.  June 19, 2002.  (pdf 20k)

REALISTS AND IDEALISTS: INTERPRETING THE BUSH DOCTRINE
Geoffrey Kemp discusses the differing interpretations by realists and neoconservatives of President Bush's doctrine of preemptive action. Al-Ittihad, August 25, 2002.

RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTER LAUNCHES BOOK AT NIXON CENTER EVENT
The Nixon Center hosted a reception and small dinner to release Russian Foreign Minister Igor S. Ivanov's new book, The New Russian Diplomacy, published jointly by the Center and The Brookings Institution, on Friday, May 3.  The reception -- which featured remarks by Brent Scowcroft, the event's chair and a Center Board member, and an introduction by Secretary of State Colin Powell -- was broadcast live on C-SPAN2.  Click here for more pictures from the day's events.

For information on ordering the Minister's book, follow this link to website of the Brookings Institution Press or call the Press at 1-800-275-1447.

THE QUARTET: CAN IT BE EFFECTIVE?
Geoffrey Kemp, Director of Regional Strategic Programs, writes in Al-Ittihad on the emergence of the Quartet (US, UN, Russia, and the EU) and its importance in the Middle East peace negotiations. July 21, 2002.

RUSSIAN TV COMMENTATOR & FOREIGN POLICY AUTHORITY TO EXPAND CENTER'S PROGRAMS IN RUSSIA
The Nixon Center announced today the appointment of leading Moscow television journalist Alexei Pushkov (right) as a Senior Advisor. Anchor and Editor-in-Chief of Post-Scriptum, a respected foreign affairs analysis program, Pushkov will play an important role in expanding the Center’s programs in Russia.  June 11, 2002.

DO TERRORIST NETWORKS NEED A HOME? (pdf)
Senior Fellow Nikolas K. Govsdev and Ray Takeyh of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy address the challenge posed by failed states in the war on terrorism in this article in The Washington Quarterly.

REPORT ON APRIL DIALOGUE IN MOSCOW
Follow the above link for a report by Center Director Paul J. Saunders assessing a Center delegation's meetings with Russian officials, parliamentarians, and opinion-makers on the eve of the Bush-Putin summit (pdf 43k), or click here for additional information on the delegation.

THREE EXPERTS TO EXPAND CENTER PROGRAMS
The Nixon Center is pleased to announce new ties to three prominent experts who will further develop the Center's programs in strategic studies, immigration, and international law.  Follow this link for details.

THE NATIONAL INTEREST

Subscribe

Fall 2003 
No. 73

JUST PUBLISHED

Advancing American Interests in the US-Russian Relationship

Interim Report



by The Commission on America's National Interests and Russia


Published by The Commission on America's National Interests and Russia

RECENT RELEASES
Download below
(req. free Acrobat Reader)

The New Russian Diplomacy



by Russian Foreign Minister Igor S. Ivanov


Co-published by The Nixon Center and The Brookings Insitution

 

Full Text PDF (63k)
U.S.-Russian Relations:  A New Strategic Partnership
A Report on the U.S.-Russian Dialogue

Full Text PDF (362k)
Iran's Nuclear Weapons Options:  Issues and Analysis
Edited by
Geoffrey Kemp

America's National Interests

Full Text PDF (848k)

America's National Interests
by The Commission on America's National Interests

CHINA/ASIA

Daqing Meets Wall Street
by Dan Ewing

Small Mercies: China and America after 9/11

by David M. Lampton
(pdf 30k)

Cycles, Process, and Opportunities in U.S.-China Relations
by David M. Lampton
(pdf 61k)


missilemonocover.gif (148358 bytes)

Full Text PDF (409k)
A Big Power Agenda for East Asia: America, China, and Japan
by David M. Lampton and Gregory C. May

RUSSIA

Why Globalization Didn't Rescue Russia
by Paul Saunders


Full Text PDF (88k)
What Is to Be Undone?  A Russia Policy Agenda for the New Administration

TESTIMONY

Geoffrey Kemp:  Regional Considerations for a War with Iraq.
July 31, 2002.  html pdf (61kb)

Geoffrey Kemp:  U.S. Policy Towards Iraq
October 4, 2001.  html pdf (20k)

Maurice R. Greenberg:
China's Entry Into the WTO
February 16, 2000.  html 

pdf (28K)

Peter W. Rodman:
European Common Foreign, Security, and Defense Policies
November 10, 1999.  html 

pdf (21K)

Dimitri K. Simes and Paul Saunders:
Russian Corruption
September 21, 1999.  html  pdf (16K)

Peter W. Rodman:
NATO and the European Union's Common Foreign and Security Policy
March 24, 1999.  html 

pdf (27K)

Peter W. Rodman:
Overview of the Clinton Foreign Policy
October 8, 1998.  html 

pdf (22K)

David M. Lampton:
The Taiwan Relations Act After 20 Years
March 25, 1999.  html

pdf (44K) 

David M. Lampton:
The Taiwan Security Enhancement Act
August 4, 1999.  html

pdf (133K)

 


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