The Washington Quarterly
2012 Power Transitions
Winter 2012    Volume 35, Number 1
Provocations TWQ Top 10

  1. Coping with a Conflicted China, David Shambaugh, Winter 2011.
  2. The Illusion of UN Security Council Reform, Thomas G. Weiss, Autumn 2003.
  3. The Battle for China’s Top Nine Leadership Posts, Cheng Li, Winter 2012.
  4. Why America No Longer Gets Asia, Evan A. Feigenbaum, Spring 2011.
  5. China in the Global Financial Crisis: Rising Influence, Rising Challenges, William H. Overholt, January 2010.
  6. The Role of Islam in Pakistan’s Future, Husain Haqqani, Winter 2004-05.
  7. Can China Defend a “Core Interest” in the South China Sea?, Toshi Yoshihara and James R. Holmes, Spring 2011.
  8. Why Doesn’t Russia Join the WTO?, Anders Aslund, April 2010.
  9. American and Chinese Power after the Financial Crisis, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., October 2010.
  10. Pakistan’s Counterterrorism Strategy: Separating Friends from Enemies, Ayesha Siddiqa, Winter 2011.
Behind the Headlines
    SECURITY CHALLENGES FACING THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION
    This exclusive Washington Quarterly e-briefing book offers insights and policy recommendations from leading bipartisan strategic
    thinkers to help navigate some of the most critical and complex security issues facing the Obama administration and its
    newly-announced national security leadership.


Revisiting the Future: Geopolitical Effects of the Financial Crisis
Mathew J. Burrows and Jennifer Harris (initially published April 2009).

Drafters of the National Intelligence Council’s 2025 report forecast potential effects of the ongoing financial crisis on the economy, the role of the state, and the shape of world order. Will reduced U.S. political and market clout be one of the casualties? More on Multipolarity/Multilateralism and U.S. Hegemony>

 


American and Chinese Power after the Financial Crisis
Joseph S. Nye, Jr. (initially published October 2010).

The United States has been widely blamed for the recent financial crisis, while China continues to grow and benefits from projections about the future. But be wary of the wrong long-term projections from the recent crisis that could lead to costly policy miscalculations. More on Asia>



Coping with a Conflicted China
David Shambaugh (initially published Winter 2011).

China’s increasingly tough and truculent posture is, in part, the product of an ongoing intensive internal debate. China remains a deeply conflicted rising power, and understanding its series of competing international identities is crucial to anticipating Beijing’s behavior on the world stage. More on China and Taiwan>

 

Why America No Longer Gets Asia
Evan A. Feigenbaum (initially published Spring 2011).

After a 300-year hiatus, Asia is being reconnected at last, yet Washington is badly prepared for this momentous rebirth. Unless U.S. policymakers adapt, and soon, they will miss opportunities in every part of the region and find the United States less relevant to Asia’s future. More on Asia>

Understanding the U.S. Nuclear Weapons Policy Debate
Christopher F. Chyba and J. D. Crouch (initially published July 2009).

Together, a former NSC official from the Clinton administration and one from the George W. Bush administration identify eight key divergent views in the ongoing U.S. nuclear weapons policy, posture, and programs debates, and explain the most important areas of disagreement and consensus. More on Weapons of Mass Destruction>

 

What Do They Really Want?: Obama’s North Korea Conundrum
Victor D. Cha (initially published October 2009).

Kim Jong-il may want nuclear weapons, but is that all? The former deputy of the U.S. delegation to the Six-Party Talks draws on North Korean positions that, even when contradictory, may explain core goals which lie beneath Pyongyang’s rhetoric and provocative actions. More on the Koreas>

 

Engaging Autocratic Allies to Promote Democracy
David Adesnik and Michael McFaul (initially published Spring 2006).

Diplomacy, particularly with dictatorships friendly toward the United States, is often overlooked as a means to promote democratic regime change. Yet, a closer look at three forgotten cases from the late 1980s yields several lessons for today’s efforts to engage but reform autocratic allies. More on U.S. Politics and Foreign Policy>

 

The Militarization of Post-Khomeini Iran: Praetorianism 2.0
Elliot Hen-Tov and Nathan Gonzalez (initially published Winter 2011).

The June 12 election fiasco was not a struggle for power, but a de facto coup by the emerging militant class against the clerical oligarchy, creating what might be called a modern “praetorian” state. Ironically, such an Iran could actually be stable, and easier to deal with. More on Iran>

The Other Side of the COIN: Perils of Premature Evacuation from Iraq
Kenneth M. Pollack and Irena L. Sargsyan (initially published April 2010).

The United States is leaving Iraq, but how it leaves is tremendously important. The authors draw lessons from recent history around the world to foresee the risks, namely civil war resuming or problems between the Iraqi military and civilian government arising, and how to minimize them. More on Iraq>

 

Caught in the Muddle: America’s Pakistan Strategy
Paul Staniland (initially published Winter 2011).

The United States needs to strategically retrench in Pakistan: to step back from goals of reforming Pakistani society and forging regional harmony, limit U.S. commitments to bring them into line with limited capabilities, and seek strategic room to maneuver on three key issues. More on South Asia>

Weak States and Global Threats: Fact or Fiction?
Stewart Patrick (initially published Spring 2006).

Little evidence underpins sweeping assertions about the connection between weak or failing states and transnational threats such as terrorism, proliferation, or disease, even though policy is being implemented accordingly. What characteristics of state weakness are really associated with which dangers? More on Foreign Aid and Economic Development>

The Security Implications of Climate Change
John Podesta and Peter Ogden (initially published Winter 2007-08).

Within the next 30 years, climate change is expected to cause destabilizing migration, massive food and water shortages, devastating natural disaster, and deadly disease outbreaks that will present serious security challenges not only to directly affected countries, but to the United States and the entire international community. More on Energy and Environment>

TWQ Books
 

Reshaping Rogue States

Reshaping Rogue States Preemption, Regime Change, and US Policy toward Iran, Iraq, and North Korea Global Powers in 21st Century
Global Powers in the 21st Century
The Politics, Power, and Visions of China, Europe, India, Japan, and Russia

The Epicenter of Crisis: The New Middle East

The Epicenter of Crisis: The New Middle East
Examining Six Critical Countries in a Changed World
 
  The Battle for Hearts and Minds The Battle for Hearts and Minds
Using Soft Power to Undermine Terrorist Networks
What Does the World Want from America? What Does the World Want from America?
International Perspectives on U.S. Foreign Policy
Contemporary Nuclear Debates Contemporary Nuclear Debates
Missile Defense, Arms Control, and Arms Races in the Twenty-First Century
 
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