Search Results

2001 – 2010 of 2,046 search results for Emerging Leaders

  1. 2024 CCS Alliances.pdf

    on Saudi Arabia (46% strengthen vs. 48% weaken). https://www.economist.com/leaders

  2. chicago_council_global_affairs_fy16_form990.pdf

    LEADERS, POLICYMAKERS, BUSINESS EXECUTIVES, JOURNALISTS, AND OTHER THE CHICAGO ... Income tax imposed in prior year Subtract line 5 from line 4, unless subject to emergency ... NOMINEES FOR THE FELLOWSHIP ARE SOLICITED FROM LEADERS IN THE US AND CHINA,

  3. TaiwanDefenseReport_221025.pdf

    Press, Calculating Credibility: How Leaders Assess Military Threats (Ithaca,

  4. Americans Remain Committed to South Korea.pdf

    been a dizzying year on the Korean Peninsula, with multiple summits between leaders

  5. report_ccs2017-paris-agreement_171102.pdf

    favorable, somewhat unfavorable, or very unfavorable view of the following world leaders

  6. report_ccs2017-iran-deal_171004.pdf

    favorable, somewhat unfavorable, or very unfavorable view of the following world leaders

  7. Loey Felipe

    Ryan Crocker on Iran-Iraq Relations

    Podcast
    by Brian Hanson, Ryan Crocker

    Ryan Crocker, who served as the US ambassador to Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Syria, Kuwait and Lebanon, joins Deep Dish to discuss America’s relationship with Iran and Iraq.

  8. U.S. Air Force
    Defense and Security

    Why Is the United States Bombing Somalia?

    Podcast
    by Bronwyn Bruton, Paul D. Williams, Brian Hanson

    Bronwyn Bruton of the Atlantic Council and Paul D. Williams of George Washington University join Deep Dish to explain what the US is doing in Somalia and why al Shabaab is a target.

  9. Matthias Schrader / AP

    Can Europe Stand Without the US?

    Podcast
    by Sophia Besch, Georgina Wright, Leslie Vinjamuri

    Ahead of Munich, Georgina Wright and Sophia Besch explain how Europe is rearming and diversifying its alliances.

  10. Kevin Wolf / AP

    Can the US Keep Its Edge on the Battlefield?

    Podcast
    by Kathleen Hicks, Leslie Vinjamuri

    Former Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks lays out how the United States is trying to stay ahead as new technologies and global threats reshape modern warfare.