Professor Bruce Hoffmand and Jacob Ware (SSP’19) analyze the fracturing of domestic far-right terrorist threats, from QAnon to “salad bar” ideologies.
Markus Garlauskas (SSP’02) notes the importance of North Korea’s newly revealed ICBM and how it impacts U.S. policy.
SSP alumnus Markus Garlauskas (SSP’02) provides a front-row seat analysis of U.S.-North Korea relations in the Trump years.
Daniel Harris (SSP’21) analyzes the successful Venezuelan anti-Castro-Communist counterinsurgency of the 1960s and its model for emergent democracies.
Jakob Urda (SSP’22) analyzes how domestic troubles in 2020 – COVID-19 pandemic and historic floods – spurned Chinese aggression abroad.
Samuel Seitz (SSP’20) and Professor Caitlin Talmadge argue that unpredictability fails to bolster deterrence or gain bargaining leverage in foreign policy.
SSP student Dan McCormick discusses the implications of Russian and Chinese cooperation.
Counterinsurgency efforts in Pakistan require a strategy that is both military and political, writes student Daniel Harris.
SSP Alumna Meghan McGee argues that European leaders can’t wait until after the November elections to put pressure on the United States.
Charles Smythe (SSP’21) argues that the preference for cyber offense over cyber defense is based on a series of misperceptions.