image

Micah Zenko

Douglas Dillon Fellow

Expertise

Conflict prevention; U.S. national security policy; military planning and operations; nuclear weapons policy

Programs

Center for Preventive Action

Featured Publications

Council Special Report No. 62

Partners in Preventive Action

Authors: Paul B. Stares and Micah Zenko

In this globalized world, countries will need to cooperate on policies that extend across borders to address issues that affect them all, including conflict prevention and peacemaking. The authors of this report assess the strengths and weaknesses of international institutions and provide a set of practical recommendations for how the United States can strengthen the global architecture for preventive action by partnering with those organizations.

See more in United States, International Organizations, Conflict Prevention

All Publications

Article

UN Early Warning for Preventing Conflict

Authors: Micah Zenko and Rebecca R. Friedman
International Peacekeeping

Micah Zenko and Rebecca R. Friedman argue that rather than create a comprehensive early warning system for preventing conflict, the UN can focus on other reforms to improve its ability to analyze and absorb existing early warning information.

See more in UN, Peacemaking

Op-Ed

Tackling Tactical Nuclear Weapons

Author: Micah Zenko
Foreign Policy

Micah Zenko argues that New START is a good step forward for limiting strategic nuclear weapons, but the proliferation and deployment of tactical nukes is a serious, and unaddressed, problem.

See more in Proliferation

Academic Module

Academic Module: Between Threats and War

Author: Micah Zenko

Featuring teaching notes by CFR Fellow Micah Zenko, author of the CFR book Between Threats and War: Discrete Military Operations in the Post-Cold War World, this academic module includes additional resources to supplement the teaching of the text in the classroom. In this book, Dr. Zenko examines thirty-six discrete military operations carried out by the United States and evaluates U.S. policy choices, recommending ways in which limited military force may be applied in the future.

See more in United States, Wars and Warfare