Weekly Round-Up

Quincy news highlights

May 23, 2021 

UPCOMING WEBINARS

What Does a Foreign Policy for the Middle Class Look Like?

Tuesday, May 25
3:00 pm Eastern

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President Biden has talked about pursuing a foreign policy for middle class America and all Americans, but what does that actually mean? Foreign policy has become the dominion of the elites in Washington, leaving ordinary people out of the conversation when it comes to defense expenditures, overseas interventions, and America’s relationships with the rest of the world. Partisan politics have tainted the way people see foreign policy and often leave the country bitterly divided. Biden says he wants to change this, but how? We take a look at how foreign policy has affected the heartland, what would need to change in Washington, and what it would take to make it a ‘bread and butter issue’ that makes Americans’ lives better.

Join a conversation cosponsored by Center for the National Interest featuring University of Texas' Michael Lind, Conservative Partnership Institute's Rachel Bovard, and Modern Age's Daniel McCarthy. The Quincy Institute’s Kelley Beaucar Vlahos will moderate, and the National Interest’s George Beebe will offer introductory remarks.

 

Iran’s Presidential Election and its Future
Foreign and Domestic Policies

Wednesday, May 26
1:30 pm Eastern

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With only weeks left until Iran’s June 18 presidential elections, campaigning will begin in earnest the last week of May. Elections in the Islamic Republic are neither free nor fair, but they are consequential. Today, opinion polls indicate that the Iranian public’s enthusiasm for the elections is at an all-time low. Yet, the elections will likely have a profound impact on Iran’s future engagement – or lack thereof – with the United States and the West, on the durability of the nuclear deal, as well as on the internal struggle to move Iran into a more open and democratic direction.

Will Iran’s next president be a conservative or can the centrists and reformists unite once more to retain the presidency? What implications will a conservative victory have for U.S.-Iran relations, nascent regional diplomacy with Saudi Arabia and the UAE, and Iran’s embattled civil society? Join us for us for a discussion with Tara Sepehri Far, Reza Sayah, and Bijan Khajehpour. Trita Parsi, Quincy Institute’s Executive Vice President, will moderate.

Making the Forever War:
The Enduring Insights of Historian Marilyn Young

Tuesday, June 1
1:00 pm Eastern

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What drives the forever war? First and foremost, it is a failure to learn the lessons of the past, argued the late Marilyn Young, a preeminent historian of American warmaking and its impact at home and abroad. This virtual panel examines her ideas and legacy, captured in a new collection of her essays, Making the Forever War: Marilyn Young on the Culture and Politics of American Militarism. Young shows how the United States has formed a domestic politics and culture that enable the country to be continually at war, without the American people paying much attention. Long before 9/11, she reveals, the conditions for endless war were laid in U.S. military actions in Korea, Vietnam, and beyond.

To discuss Young’s work, the Quincy Institute has assembled a panel of distinguished historians who knew Marilyn personally.  The discussion features QI President Andrew Bacevich; QI Nonresident Fellow and Emory Law Professor Mary Dudziak, who co-edited Making the Forever War; and QI Nonresident Fellow and Johns Hopkins Assistant Professor Christy ThorntonStephen Wertheim, QI’s Director of Grand Strategy, will moderate.

 

FEATURED

Muslim Governments are Giving China a Free Pass on Xinjiang
By Giorgio Cafiero & Annelle Sheline, Research Fellow

World Politics Review, 5/19/21

A chorus of condemnation has risen in recent months from Western capitals in response to China’s persecution of the Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang.

READ MORE

Will Biden-Moon Summit Force White House to Clarify Plans for Korea?
By Jessica Lee, Senior Research Fellow 
Responsible Statecraft, 5/20/21

So far, the White House has been vague, even contradictory, when it comes to its strategy for restarting talks with Pyongyang.

READ MORE

Biden the Bold vs. Joe the Timid
By Andrew Bacevich, President
TomDispatch, 5/18/21

If Biden wants to succeed in his ambitious domestic agenda, he’ll need to curb America’s war habit.

READ MORE

Congress’s Fixation with China’s ‘Malign Influence’ Undermines Americans’ Civil Liberties and Security
By Research Fellows Rachel Esplin Odell and Jessica Lee
Responsible Statecraft, 5/14/21

The Strategic Competition Act purports to oppose anti-Asian racism but its provisions would actually contribute to it.

READ MORE

Radio
Unconditional Support for Israel in Congress is Starting to Erode
Interview with Mark Perry, Senior Analyst
Background Briefing with Ian Masters/KPFK, 5/18/21

READ MORE

 

Radio
How American Opinions on the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict are Changing
Interview with Kelley Beaucar Vlahos, Editorial Director
WTOP, 5/20/21

READ MORE

MORE. MORE. MORE.

Waning U.S. Must Overcome Fear of China’s Inevitable Rise to the Top by Andrew Leung/ Quoted: East Asia Program Director Michael Swaine, South China Morning Post, 5/20/21

Moon’s Goals for Biden Summit: Vaccines and North Korea Progress by Steven Borowiec/ Quoted: Senior Research Fellow Jessica Lee, Nikkei Asia, 5/20/21

What to Make of the Blinken-Lavrov ‘Showdown’ in Iceland by Senior Fellow Anatol Lieven, Responsible Statecraft, 5/19/21

RADIO: Israel/Palestine Conflict, Interviewed: Senior Analyst Mark Perry, Top of Mind with Julie Rose/Sirius Radio, 5/18/21

Congress Moves to Revoke Eisenhower’s Blank Check for Middle East Wars by Research Assistant Matthew Petti, Responsible Statecraft, 5/18/21

New Study: World Likes American Culture, Opposes U.S. Military Adventurism by Research Assistant Matthew Petti, Responsible Statecraft, 5/18/21

NYT Fails to Disclose Columnist’s Side Gig at pro-Israel Advocacy Group by Investigative Journalist at Large Eli Clifton, Responsible Statecraft, 5/17/21

Bret Stephens Saw David Brooks's Conflict of Interest and Went Hmm, Why Don't I Get Myself One Too by Esther Wang/ Cited: Quincy Institute, Jezebel, 5/17/21

TELEVISION: How Middle East Politics Are Shifting Over Israel-Palestine, Interviewed: Executive Vice President Trita Parsi, Rising/Hill TV Live, 5/17/21

The Larger Lessons of Liz Cheney's Ouster by Nicholas Lehmann/ Cited: Quincy Institute, The New Yorker, 5/19/21

Don’t Forget Beijing’s Role in America’s Hawkish Turn on China by Elliot Waldman/ Quoted: Grand Strategy Program Director, Stephen Wertheim, World Politics Review, 5/13/21

 
 
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