Ivo Daalder and I wrote for Foreign Affairs on the European Security crisis and a path forward
Read MoreOn December 9-10, President Biden will host a Summit for Democracy. Professor Bruce Jentleson and I share some thoughts.
Read MoreMy new Brookings Institution report, co-authored with Agneska Bloch, examines how NATO can usefully address the challenges posed by China and climate change.
Read MoreI worked with an amazing team at Brookings to produce this short video on America’s alliances. Please check it out!
Read MoreIt’s hard to believe it’s been 20 years since 9/11. I reflect on some of the trends in the Democratic and Republican parties in the years leading up to 9/11, and in the ensuing 20 years.
Read MoreMy thoughts for HDiplo on the Biden foreign policy
Read MoreI contributed to a roundtable for the Duck of Minerva on Paul Musgrave’s recent piece about political science “lab leaks.”
Read MoreIn this article co-authored with Michael C. Desch, Ana K. Petrova, and Kimberly Peh, we discuss the results of a survey of international affairs schools deans and top-50 department chairs regarding hiring priorities and attitudes toward what should count for tenure and promotion.
Read Moreby Lindsey W. Ford and James Goldgeier
This piece is part of the Brookings project: Blueprints for American Renewal and Prosperity
Read Moreby James Goldgeier
Some of the recent literature on negotiations at the end of the Cold War regarding German reunification and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has deflected attention from an important policy problem that arose during subsequent deliberations about whether to enlarge the membership of NATO. Newly released U.S. and Russian archival materials highlight this problem very clearly, namely, how leaders manage tradeoffs and uncertainty. Pursuing one set of interests can harm the achievement of other interests. At times, policies take a while to form, adding to uncertainty in relations between countries. This article highlights the ways U.S. President Bill Clinton and his top advisers convinced themselves that they could both enlarge NATO and keep Russia on a Western-oriented track, despite Russian President Boris Yeltsin’s repeated warnings to the contrary.
Read MoreBy James Goldgeier and Bruce W. Jentleson for Foreign Affairs
Read Moreby Agneska Bloch and James Goldgeier
Some thoughts from me and my Brookings colleague Agneska Bloch on the Transatlantic relationship in the Biden presidency
Read MoreJames Goldgeier and Elizabeth N. Saunders
In an H-Diplo roundtable on presidential tapes, Professor Elizabeth Saunders and I explore how the presidential tapes from the Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon administrations help us understand better the role of domestic politics in shaping presidential decision-making.
Read MoreJoshua Shifrinson and I wrote the introduction to this H-Diplo roundtable on NATO Expansion in Retrospect. The roundtable features authors from our June 2020 special issue of International Politics on the legacies of NATO enlargement.
Read MoreBy James Goldgeier and Joshua R. Itzkowitz Shifrinson
International Politics
This piece frames a special issue on the Legacies of NATO Enlargement
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