Emerging Threats to US National Security: From Ukraine to the South China Sea

April 11, 2022
4:30 pm
Just a little more than six months ago, the United States marked the twentieth anniversary of the terrorist attacks of September 11th, and the end of America’s longest war as the last U.S. troops withdrew from Afghanistan. To mark the occasion, the Institute of Politics and Global Affairs organized a half-day conference of practitioners and academic thought leaders to reflect on the past, present, and future of US grand strategy and the complicated inter-relationships between domestic and foreign policy.
In just six months, existing challenges, such as China’s projection of power in the South China Sea, have intensified and altogether new challenges have emerged, most dramatically the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The NATO alliance, once derided as a Cold War Relic, is once again central, and defense spending is once again increasingly swiftly in most western democracies. This panel discussion will engage these and other developments since September 2021 and examine what they portend for the future of US foreign policy.
Panelists
Annie Pforzheimer is a Senior Non-Resident Associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, an Adjunct Professor at the City University of New York, and a public commentator on foreign policy. Her previous thirty-year diplomatic career included positions such as Deputy Chief of Mission in Kabul; director of the U.S. security assistance program in Mexico; lead human rights officer in Turkey and South Africa; and Director for Central America migration issues at the National Security Council. Ms. Pforzheimer is a graduate of Harvard University and the National Defense University, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
James Rogers is DIAS Assistant Professor in War Studies, within the Centre for War Studies, at Southern Denmark University, and Associate Fellow within LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics. He is currently Special Advisor to the UK Parliament's All-Party Parliamentary Group on Drones and a UK MoD Defence Opinion Leader. His research focuses on drone warfare, contemporary security policy, and the history of warfare, and it has been featured in the Washington Post, Economist, CNN, and, the Guardian, among other outlets.
Daniel Stoian is a Fellow with the Negotiation Task Force at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University and a Visiting Scholar at Cornell's Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies. He most recently served as Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Legislative Affairs Bureau at the U.S. Department of State. Previously he served as the Deputy Executive Director in the South Central Asia Bureau, overseeing the operations of 27 SCA missions and 17 domestic offices across NEA and SCA. He received his masters of public administration at Harvard University, and completed his undergraduate work in computer science engineering and international relations at the University of California at Davis.
Moderators
Sarah Kreps is the John L. Wetherill Professor of Government, Adjunct Professor of Law, and Director of the Tech Policy Lab at Cornell University. She is also a Non-Resident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution. Dr. Kreps has held fellowships at the Council on Foreign Relations (where she is a life member), Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and the University of Virginia’s Miller Center for Public Affairs. She has a BA from Harvard University, MSc from Oxford, and PhD from Georgetown. Between 1999-2003, she served on active duty in the United States Air Force.
Douglas L. Kriner is Clinton Rossiter Professor in American Institutions in the Department of Government and the faculty director of the Institute of Politics and Global Affairs at Cornell University. He is the author of five books, including (with Dino Christenson) The Myth of the Imperial Presidency: How Public Opinion Checks the Unilateral Executive; After the Rubicon: Congress, Presidents, and the Politics of Waging War; and (with Francis Shen) The Casualty Gap: The Causes and Consequences of American Wartime Inequalities.
Additional Information
Program
Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies
Einaudi Center for International Studies