14 Results for:

January 17, 2014

Defense and Security
You Might Have Missed: NSA Reforms, CIA Drone Strikes, and Benghazi

“Presidential Policy Directive/PPD-28: Signals Intelligence Activities,” White House, January 17, 2014. When the United States collects nonpublicly available signals intelligence in bulk, it shall u…

Obama NSA speech

May 24, 2016

Terrorism and Counterterrorism
Dropping the Cyber Bomb? Spectacular Claims and Unremarkable Effects

Brandon Valeriano is a reader at Cardiff University and a fellow at the Niskanen Center, Heather Roff is a research scientist at the Global Security Initiative at Arizona State University, and Sean L…

Cyber CFR Net Politics

March 16, 2011

Japan
Emperor Urges Japanese to Hope as Acute Needs Grow

People watch a television broadcasting Japan's Emperor Akihito's televised address to the nation at an electronics retail store in Tokyo. (Issei Kato/Courtesy Reuters) [Click here for information …

People watch a television broadcasting Japan’s Emperor Akihito’s televised address to the nation at an electronics retail store in Tokyo.

September 21, 2011

Trade
KORUS-FTA and the Need for a U.S. Trade and Investment Policy

Hyundai-Kia Chairman Mong-Koo Chung speaks at the ceremonial groundbreaking of the 1.2 billion dollar KIA auto plant before it began construction in West Point, Georgia October 20, 2006 (Tami Chappel…

Hyundai-Kia Chairman Mong-Koo Chung speaks at the ceremonial groundbreaking of the 1.2 billion dollar KIA auto plant before it began construction in West Point, Georgia October 20, 2006.

August 6, 2021

Global
Five Foreign-Policy Movies Worth Watching About Actual World Events

Every summer Friday, we suggest foreign-policy-themed movies worth watching. This week: films inspired by reality. 

Three movie posters in black frames. From left: Charlie Wilson's War (a man, woman, and another man in sunglasses look out); Breaker Morant (three men in military uniforms stand over scenes of combat); Invictus (a man in a green and yellow rugby uniform looks triumphant in front of a crowd with Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela behind him).