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The Future of Counterterrorism: Start By Defining the Threat
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DECEMBER 15, 2021
1:00 PM - 2:00 PM
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How will our approach to counterterrorism change after the withdrawal from Afghanistan? Can we finally wind down the war on terror?
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Paul Pillar
Non-Resident Fellow, Quincy Institute
Jacqueline Hazelton
Associate Professor, U.S. Naval War College
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Jytte Klausen
Professor of International Cooperation, Brandeis University
Steven Simon (Moderator)
Senior Research Analyst, Quincy Institute
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Debate: Should the U.S. Seek to Contain China?
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DECEMBER 16, 2021
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
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There is a growing divergence among realists and restrainers on the issue of U.S.-China policy. On one side, a belief that Beijing has aims of regional if not global hegemony, and that Washington has a responsibility to its allies and partners to lead the security challenge and contain China’s perceived ambitions. On the other, a belief that the China “threat” has been inflated, that Beijing’s regional ambitions are not a direct threat to the United States, and that its hostility has in many ways been a reaction to aggressive Western behavior. At the very most, the U.S. should help its friends in the region defend itself to balance the power of competing interests but without the U.S. leading the charge.
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John Mearsheimer
Non-Resident Fellow, Quincy Institute, and Professor, University of Chicago
Kelley Beaucar Vlahos (Moderator)
Editorial Director, Responsible Statecraft, and Senior Advisor, Quincy Institute
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David Kang
Non-Resident Fellow, Quincy Institute, and Professor, University of Southern California
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