No images? Click here (Pierre Crom via Getty Images) Clashes in Serbia last week left NATO troops injured, Serbia emboldened, Kosovo weakened, Russia empowered, and the transatlantic community divided. In Arab News, Hudson Senior Fellow Luke Coffey reminds readers why the Balkans are important to stability in Europe. “The Kiss of Biden” and Foreign Policy in Erdoğan’s Reelection (Gabriel Bouys/AFP via Getty Images) In the Jerusalem Strategic Tribune, Hudson Center for Peace and Security in the Middle East Director Michael Doran explains why Joe Biden's support for Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu undermined the Turkish opposition candidate in an election dominated by nationalism and national security. How Bad Policies Created the Worst Drug Crisis in American History (Screenshot via YouTube) The cartels fueling the fentanyl epidemic are monsters—but they do not want to become martyrs. On Hold These Truths with Dan Crenshaw, Hudson President and CEO John P. Walters suggests strong, decisive policy responses to solve the American drug crisis. IAEA for AI? That Model Has Already Failed (Win McNamee via Getty Images) Rapid improvements in artificial intelligence have drawn comparisons to a new nuclear arms race. But the International Atomic Energy Agency’s model would be even less effective at restricting AI than it was at preventing nuclear proliferation, explains Hudson Center for the Future of Liberal Society Associate Director Mike Watson in the Wall Street Journal. The Space Race Is Heating Up (Screenshot via Fox Business) Senior Fellow Rebeccah Heinrichs spoke on Fox Business about how developments in China’s military-adjacent space program harm American national security. BEFORE YOU GO... As the war in Ukraine casts additional uncertainty onto the future of US-China relations, National Security Council Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific Kurt Campbell joined Hudson Distinguished Fellow Walter Russell Mead to discuss the future of America’s global strategy. |