A new report informed by 15 wargame simulations examines nuclear dynamics in a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, assessing what creates the greatest pressure for nuclear weapons use in such a conflict, what ...
Analyzing economic, political, and security developments in Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia. Throughout history the South Caucasus has been a fault zone between East and West. It includes majority ...
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs projects 305 million people will require humanitarian assistance in 2025. In its newly released 2025 Global Humanitarian Overview ...
Please join the CSIS Defense and Security Department for the launch of a joint report with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Security Studies Program Wargaming Lab titled Confronting ...
Why was martial law declared in South Korea on December 3? What happens next for President Yoon Suk Yeol as he faces impeachment? What does this mean for South Korea and its relations with the U.S., ...
Please join the CSIS Project on Prosperity and Development for a conversation with Deputy Secretary of State for Management and Resources Richard R. Verma to discuss the work that the Biden ...
Join the CSIS Africa Program for a conversation with Her Excellency Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner, Foreign Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The ongoing conflict in eastern DRC ...
China announced strict export controls on critical minerals amid a growing tech trade war with the United States, posing significant economic and national security risks given their role in ...
Please join CSIS Renewing American Innovation on Tuesday, December 10 from 1:00pm-1:45pm for a conversation with Professor William Bonvillian about his new book, Pioneering Progress, American Science, ...
China has long been rumored to operate spy facilities in Cuba, but few details about its footprint there have been made public. Research by CSIS reveals four sites within Cuba that are most likely to ...
Responding to a Taiwan contingency will force military leaders to adopt tactics they haven't considered in generations—those of a scrappy underdog. And they tend to work.