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The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a
bipartisan think tank in Washington, D.C., looks ahead in this
annual volume at the critical international policy issues facing
the United States and the world in 2017. This collection of essays
by CSIS experts seeks to flesh out the specific policy areas that
the new U.S. administration will face in an uncertain and dynamic
global context. Global Flashpoints is a valuable resource for
understanding the foreign and defense policy questions that will be
critical to the United States and its allies in the years ahead.
Maintaining international security and pursuing American interests
is more difficult now than perhaps at any time in history. The
security environment that the United States faces is more complex,
dynamic, and difficult to predict. At the same time, no domestic
consensus exists on the purposes of American power and how best to
pursue them. The Center for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS) looks ahead in this annual volume at the "flashpoints" that
will likely arise in 2016, how best to deal with them, and what
lasting effects they might leave for the next American
administration and its allies around the world.
Maintaining international security and pursuing American interests
is more difficult now than perhaps at any time in history. The
security environment that the United States faces is more complex,
dynamic, and difficult to predict. At the same time, no domestic
consensus exists on the purposes of American power and how best to
pursue them. The Center for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS) will look ahead in this annual volume at the "flashpoints"
that will likely arise in 2015, how best to deal with them, and
what lasting effects they might leave for the next American
administration and its allies around the world. Contributions by:
Jon B. Alterman, Samuel J. Brannen, Ernest Z. Bower, Heather A.
Conley, Anthony H. Cordesman, Victor Cha, Edward C. Chow, Jennifer
G. Cooke, Zack Cooper, Michael J. Green, Matthew P. Goodman, John
J. Hamre, Kathleen H. Hicks, Christopher K. Johnson, Stephanie
Sanok Kostro, Andrew C. Kuchins, Sarah Ladislaw, Maren Leed, James
A. Lewis, Haim Malka, Jeffrey Mankoff, Carl Meacham, Sarah
Mendelson, Andrew A. Michta, Scott Miller, J. Stephen Morrison,
Clark A. Murdock, Richard M. Rossow, Daniel F. Runde, Thomas M.
Sanderson, Conor M. Savoy, Sharon Squassoni, Amy Studdart, Nicholas
Szechenyi, and Juan C. Zarate.
Maintaining international security and pursuing American interests
is more difficult now than perhaps at any time in history. The
security environment that the United States faces is more complex,
dynamic, and difficult to predict. At the same time, no domestic
consensus exists on the purposes of American power and how best to
pursue them. The Center for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS) will look ahead in this annual volume at the "flashpoints"
that will likely arise in 2015, how best to deal with them, and
what lasting effects they might leave for the next American
administration and its allies around the world. Contributions by:
Jon B. Alterman, Samuel J. Brannen, Ernest Z. Bower, Heather A.
Conley, Anthony H. Cordesman, Victor Cha, Edward C. Chow, Jennifer
G. Cooke, Zack Cooper, Michael J. Green, Matthew P. Goodman, John
J. Hamre, Kathleen H. Hicks, Christopher K. Johnson, Stephanie
Sanok Kostro, Andrew C. Kuchins, Sarah Ladislaw, Maren Leed, James
A. Lewis, Haim Malka, Jeffrey Mankoff, Carl Meacham, Sarah
Mendelson, Andrew A. Michta, Scott Miller, J. Stephen Morrison,
Clark A. Murdock, Richard M. Rossow, Daniel F. Runde, Thomas M.
Sanderson, Conor M. Savoy, Sharon Squassoni, Amy Studdart, Nicholas
Szechenyi, and Juan C. Zarate.
After a dozen years of war, the 2008 financial crisis, budgetary
contraction inside government, and growing political polarization,
U.S. security policy stands at a crossroads as America finds itself
lacking a durable political consensus on the nation's role in the
world. In Global Forecast 2014, CSIS scholars answer the questions
that will determine the future trajectory of American power in 2014
and beyond. The report looks overseas at America's ability to
sustain its rebalance to Asia and adapt to the changing order in
the Middle East. At the same time, the authors examine America's
ability to get its own house in order-to develop a sustainable
resource strategy for defense and to rebuild a national security
consensus to meet the challenges the United States will face in the
years ahead.
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