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Joseph S. Nye
By Joseph S. Nye - Jan 06,2021
CAMBRIDGE  —  American foreign policy tends to oscillate between inward and outward orientations. President George W. Bush was an interventionist; his successor, Barack Obama, less so. And Donald Trump was mostly non-interventionist.
By Joseph S. Nye - Dec 07,2020
CAMBRIDGE — Friends and allies have come to distrust the United States. Trust is closely related to truth, and President Donald Trump is notoriously loose with the truth. All presidents have lied, but never on such a scale that it debases the currency of trust.
By Joseph S. Nye - Nov 11,2020
CAMBRIDGE — There is no single future until it happens, and any effort to envision geopolitics in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic must include a range of possible futures.
By Joseph S. Nye - Nov 10,2020
CAMBRIDGE — Donald Trump may have despised international institutions, but his presidency has reminded the world of the importance of effective and resilient ones.
By Joseph S. Nye - Sep 02,2020
CAMBRIDGE — As the United States enters the home stretch of the 2020 presidential election campaign, and with neither party’s nominating convention featuring much discussion of foreign policy, the contest between President Donald Trump and Joe Biden apparently will be waged mainl
By Joseph S. Nye - Aug 16,2020
CAMBRIDGE — Brent Scowcroft, who died on August 6, aged 95, was the model of a modern lieutenant-general.
By Joseph S. Nye - Aug 08,2020
CAMBRIDGE — Since 2017, America’s National Security Strategy has focused on great power competition, and today much of Washington is busy portraying our relationship with China as a new cold war.
By Joseph S. Nye - Jun 08,2020
CAMBRIDGE — In my recent study of 14 presidents since 1945, “Do Morals Matter”, I found that Americans want a moral foreign policy, but have been torn over what that means.
By Joseph S. Nye - Oct 04,2019
CAMBRIDGE — Whether or not a conflict spirals out of control depends on the ability to understand and communicate about the scale of hostility. Unfortunately, when it comes to cyber conflict, there is no agreement on scale or how it relates to traditional military measures.
By Joseph S. Nye - Jun 09,2019
PARIS — Earlier this year, American officials acknowledged that US offensive cyber operations had stopped Russian disruption of the 2018 congressional election.

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