Thursday, November 25 2010  
Receive Updates Via E-Mail:
Nixon Center Bulletin
In The National Interest
The START Treaty and other Arms Control Initiatives



On Thursday, November 18, Gary Samore, Special Assistant to the President and White House Coordinator for Arms Control and Weapons of Mass Destruction, Proliferation, and Terrorism, spoke at a roundtable event hosted by The Nixon Center. Mr. Samore discussed the START Treaty, focusing on the need to ratify the Treaty in this Congress and identifying the possible ramifications of waiting to pass it in the next Congress. He also addressed other arms control initiatives in the Obama Administration. Richard Burt, former US Ambassador to Germany, Chief negotiator for the first START Treaty and U.S. Chairman of Global Zero, moderated. The event was referenced in Peter Baker's New York Times article, "Obama Forces Showdown with G.O.P. on Arms Pact," available here.  
A summary of the event is availbale here and you can view the entire event here on our YouTube page.

A conversation with Ambassador Clark Randt


On Tuesday, November 9, The Nixon Center hosted former Ambassador to the People's Republic of China Clark Randt at an off-the-record roundtable discussion.  The longest serving U.S. Ambassador to China, Randt shared his insights on the complexities of the U.S.-China relationship and reflected upon his experiences engaging China's leadership.  Nixon Center China Director and Starr Fellow Drew Thompson moderated.

Bob Woodward: Presidents and Wars



On Monday, November 8, author and Washington Post Associate Editor Bob Woodward spoke at a roundtable event hosted by The Nixon Center. Mr. Woodward discussed American presidents and wars, focusing on President Barack Obama and how his distance from the military leadership has the potential to become a serious problem. He also reflected on the Nixon presidency. Nixon Center Visiting Fellow Marvin Kalb moderated the discussion. A summary of the event can be found here and you can view the entire event here on our YouTube page.

The Foreign Policy Implications of a Republican House



On Thursday, November 4, The Nixon Center hosted an off-the-record discussion of the implications of the 2010 midterm elections on U.S. Foreign Policy.  Panelists Lieutenant General (Ret.) Brent Scowcroft, President of The Scowcroft Group, and Robert Merry, former President and Editor-in-Chief of Congressional Quarterly, discussed how the Republican majority in the U.S. House of Representatives will affect President Obama's foreign policy decisions over the next two years of his term.  Nixon Center Starr Distinguished National Security Fellow General (Ret.) Charles Boyd moderated.

National Policy Conference

On May 18 and 19 The Nixon Center and The Nixon Foundation presented their 2010 National Policy Conference at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, DC. The conference featured remarks by John Brennan, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism and Deputy National Security Advisor; Senator John McCain; Senator Jon Kyl; former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger; and Center Chairman Maurice Greenberg as well as many other leading writers and thinkers on American foreign policy and the global economy.

Dr. Kissinger's remarks are available here.
Senator Kyl's remarks are available here and you can watch the Senator answer questions on the ratification of the New START Treaty, the modernization program and Iran's proliferation here.
Senator McCain's remarks are available here
Dr. Schlesinger's remarks are available here
You can watch the sessions "American at War" here and "The New Great Power Dynamics" here.
"Can America have a Coherent Foreign Policy" is available here.
"What to Do about Iran?" is availbale here.
Check back later for more video highlights.


[ More At The Center ]
In this edition of The National Interest

The September/October issue is now available! In "If Israel Attacks," Bruce Riedel urges Washington to reassure the Israeli government that a nuclear armed Iran will not end its deterrence capabilities and warns that an Israeli strike on the Islamic Republic puts millions of lives at risk; Ahmed Rashid argues in "The Anarchic Republic of Pakistan" that India continues to distract Islamabad's military-intelligence complex from the radicals who are destroying Pakistan from within; and Geoffrey Wheatcroft exposes the myth of the "special relationship" between the United Kingdom and the United States in "A Love Lost Over the Atlantic."

 
RECENT PUBLICATIONS
China's Growing Role in the Middle East: Implications for the Region and Beyond In November 2009, The Nixon Center's Regional Strategic Program and the Gulf Research Center co-hosted a second workshop in Dubai focusing on the growing role of Asia in the Middle East, which was funded in part by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The monograph, China's Growing Role in the Middle East: Implications for the Region and Beyond, examines the various influences China has had on the region.

Asia’s Role in the Middle East and the Indian Ocean: Implications for the Region and the United States In April 2010, The Nixon Center's Regional Strategic Program organized a conference at the Rockefeller Foundation's Bellagio Conference Center, focusing on the growing Asian presence in the Middle East. This is part of a six year study on US interests in the Gulf and Indian Ocean funded by The Carnegie Corporation of New York and The Smith Richardson Foundation. The monograph, Asia's Role in the Middle East and the Indian Ocean: Implications for the Region and the United States, is a compilation of the papers commissioned for the conference. The monograph was edited by Geoffrey Kemp and Indre Uselmann.

Russian-American Obstacles Overshadow Obama-Medvedev Meeting In U.S. News and World Report online, Nixon Center Executive Director Paul J. Saunders warns that Russia and the United States have different foreign policy goals, priorities and expectations, and that further progress in their relationship will be difficult.

The East Moves West Nixon Center Director of Regional Strategic Programs Geoffrey Kemp’s new book The East Moves West: India, China, and Asia’s Growing Presence in the Middle East discusses the growing footprint of various Asian countries in the Middle East, including the traditionally U.S. dominated Gulf region, and the implications of this development for the region and the United States. The East Moves West was published by the Brookings Institution Press.

Is Obama Overselling His Russia Arms Control Deal? In TIME, Nixon Center President Dimitri K. Simes questions whether the Obama administration is overestimating Moscow's willingness to support strong sanctions against Iran after signing a new arms control treaty with Washington.

Giving Putin His Due Paul J. Saunders, Nixon Center Executive Director, criticizes the administration's seemingly dismissive attitude toward Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, arguing that bolstering President Dmitry Medvedev at Putin's expense is short-sighted and could derail the US-Russia reset.

Think Again: China's Military Drew Thompson, Nixon Center China Director and Starr Fellow, deconstructs the myths surrounding the PLA, arguing that China's military isn't a threat to the United States' interests, yet.

Rumble in the Junta Drew Thompson, Nixon Center Director of China Studies and Starr Fellow, argues that the United States needs to be more engaged in Myanmar to enact change rather than continuing ineffective sanctions.

London breeding Islamic terrorists Robert S. Leiken, Nixon Center Director of National Security and Immigration Programs, describes the rising danger from Muslim terrorists located in the capital of one of America's oldest and closest allies.

The Truth About Prospects for U.S. Jihad In CBS News online, Robert S. Leiken, Nixon Center Director for Immigration and National Security, examines the rise in home-based terrorism. Though America's recent troubles don't compare with Europe's more serious battles with networks of radical Islamic terrorists, Leiken concludes that the U.S. is still vulnerable to other Nidal Hasans who only have to buy a gun to wreak havok on our country.

Help has Strings Attached Paul J. Saunders, Nixon Center Executive Director, argues in The Washington Times that accepting Georgian troops to support U.S. operations in Afghanistan is a mistake - one that could lead Tbilisi to expect American support in its dispute with Russia.
 

The PLA and China’s Interests in Southeast Asia
October 26, 2010


Hard Line: The Republican Party and U.S. Foreign Policy
October 25, 2010


Israel's National Security: The Great Debates
October 18, 2010


The Battle for Hearts and Minds: Health Diplomacy and U.S.-China Relations
October 7, 2010


The End of the Worker's Paradise?
September 8, 2010


Deputy Secretary of State Steinberg on the U.S. Presence in Asia
July 27, 2010


Israel: Strategic Asset or Liability?
July 20, 2010


Mexico's Elections: Interpreting the Results
July 14, 2010


U.S.-China Relations on the Eve of the G-20
June 25, 2010


European Security with Celeste Wallander
June 18, 2010


U.S.-Russian Relations: Reset or Potemkin Village?
June 17, 2010


Japan, South Korea, and the United States after the Cheonan Sinking
June 9, 2010


A Conversation with Ambassador Rogozin
June 3, 2010


Yemen: Avoiding the False Templates of Iraq and Afghanistan
May 20, 2010


A Conversation with Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov
May 17, 2010


Iraq after the Elections: Prospects for Stability
May 13, 2010


A Conversation with Admiral Gary Roughead
May 12, 2010


President Obama's Nuclear Strategy: Less than Meets the Eye?
May 5, 2010


Dinner with Ambassador Zhang Yesui
April 28, 2010


Energy Security, Clean Energy, Climate Change and the U.S.-China Relationship
April 27, 2010


The Jerusalem Dilemma
April 22, 2010


China-North Korea Economic Relations
March 31, 2010


Russia's Role in Asian Security
March 29, 2010


Igor Yurgens on Russia's Future
March 11, 2010


A Conversation with Ambassador Idrissov
March 2, 2010


Secretary Gates receives Nixon Center Distinguished Service Award
February 24, 2010


US-China Relations: Rebalancing or Reevaluating?
February 18, 2009



[ More Events ]


About The Center | Programs | Activities | Publications