From Andrew Schwartz <[email protected]>
Subject The Evening: Iran Protests, China Currency, YYZ and More
Date January 13, 2020 9:35 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
The Evening: Iran Protests, China Currency, YYZ and More
------------------------------------------------------------
Email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser ([link removed]) .
c48bd2c1-9b25-42f7-aa17-3c814b9557f7.jpg


** Good Evening,
------------------------------------------------------------
It's Monday, January 13th.


** Protests Rage in Iran
------------------------------------------------------------
Protesters and riot police faced off in at least two cities in Iran on Monday, a third day of angry demonstrations at the country’s leaders after the government acknowledged having shot down a Ukrainian passenger plane, as the
NYT’s Ben Hubbard reports ([link removed]) .

Dive Deeper: “Containing Tehran: Understanding Iran’s Power and Exploiting Its Vulnerabilities ([link removed]) ,” by CSIS’s Seth Jones.

“A prolonged US-Iran confrontation may spark a new economic crisis in the Middle East ([link removed]) ,” by the Peterson Institute’s Adnan Mazarei.


** U.S. to Drop China’s Currency Manipulator Label
------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Treasury Department will drop its designation of China as a “currency manipulator” just two days before negotiators from Beijing and Washington are set to sign the first phase of the trade deal between the two countries, as the
FT’s James Politi and Brendan Greeley report ([link removed]) .


** U.S. Calls Pensacola Naval Base Shooting Terrorist Act
------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. is expelling 21 Saudi military students from a training program amid an FBI investigation into a deadly shooting at a Florida Navy base last year, Attorney General William Barr said on Monday, for the first time describing the attack as terrorism, as the
WSJ’s Sadie Gurman and Nancy Youssef report ([link removed]) .


** CSIS Executive Education
------------------------------------------------------------
Join CSIS March 11-13 for our course, Belt, Road, and Beyond ([link removed]) . Work with leading experts and the Reconnecting Asia Project to explore what the BRI is, what it is not, and how it is impacting commercial and strategic realities on the ground.


** Video Shorts
------------------------------------------------------------
Check out CSIS’s new series of video shorts: “Testify,” "What's Happening," "Preview," and “High Resolution.” And don’t forget to subscribe to the CSIS YouTube Channel ([link removed]) !


** In That Number
------------------------------------------------------------


** 1,000
------------------------------------------------------------
The Department of the Interior is planning to halt the use of its nearly 1,000 drones because the devices have been made at least partly in China, and the department is concerned about U.S. exposure to Chinese technology.

Source: FT ([link removed])


** Critical Quote
------------------------------------------------------------


** “Clerics get lost!”
------------------------------------------------------------
— Student protest chant in Iran on Monday


** iDeas Lab
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]
In a new High Resolution video, CSIS Stephenson Ocean Security Project director Whitley Saumweber explores China's hidden maritime ambitions. Watch it here ([link removed]) .

The Andreas C. Dracopoulos iDeas Lab at CSIS enhances our research with the latest in cutting-edge web technologies, design, and video.


** Optics
------------------------------------------------------------
CSIS
(Photo credit: Ted ALJIBE/AFP). A youth living at the foot of Taal volcano rides an outrigger canoe while the volcano spews ash as seen from Tanauan town in Batangas province, south of Manila today.


** Recommended Reading
------------------------------------------------------------
“What to Watch in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2020 ([link removed]) ,” by CSIS’s Judd Devermont, Marielle Harris, Mark Bellamy, Emilia Columbo, Mvemba Phezo Dizolele, Richard Downie and Jon Temin.


** This Town Tomorrow
------------------------------------------------------------

At 9:00 a.m. ([link removed]) , CSIS will host a conversation with former NASA Space Shuttle Commander Pam Melroy on the role of government in commercial space and international partnerships in space.

Later, at 11:30 a.m. ([link removed]) , return to CSIS for the 26th annual U.S.-Japan Security Seminar, featuring keynote remarks from Japanese Minister of Defense H.E. Taro Kono.

Also at 11:30 a.m. ([link removed]) , the Stimson Center will host its second annual Forum on the Arms Trade conference to examine these issues and identify opportunities to make the global arms trade more responsible and accountable in the years to come.


** Video
------------------------------------------------------------
Last week, CBS legend Bob Schieffer sat down with CSIS experts Kathleen Hicks, Sarah Ladislaw, Stephanie Segal, and Beverly Kirk to discuss the biggest issues to look out for in 2020. Watch their conversation here ([link removed]) .


** Podcasts
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]
Bob and I sit down with CSIS Transnational Threats Project director Seth Jones to discuss the latest U.S.-Iran developments and his new report on understanding Iran's strengths and vulnerabilities.

Listen on Spotify ([link removed]) & Apple Podcasts ([link removed]) .


** Smiles
------------------------------------------------------------
Late last week, Rush’s Neil Peart, perhaps rock’s greatest living drummer, succumbed to brain cancer at sixty-seven after battling the disease for several years.

I think the New Yorker’s Amanda Petrusich described Peart’s music best in her postscript: “Watching him play, it’s hard not to start thinking he possessed several phantom limbs. The sound was merciless.”

For people my age, Rush and Peart are iconic. According to Billboard, Rush presently ranks third, behind the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, for the most consecutive gold or platinum albums by a rock band. There is always this silly debate about whether Rush and the guys in the band are “cool” or not. Are you kidding me? Neil Peart was a legend. Of course Geddy and Alex are legends too. Listen to their music. Watch them perform. Watch the excellent 2010 documentary “Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage” (I re-watched it for maybe the fourth time Friday night).

Just watch this ([link removed]) .
I invite you to email me at [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) and follow me on Twitter @handrewschwartz ([link removed])

============================================================
The Evening is my daily guide to key insights CSIS brings to the events of the day. It is composed with the External Relations team: Emma Colbran, Caleb Diamond, and Brad Honigberg.

Follow CSIS

** CSIS Facebook ([link removed])
** CSIS Twitter ([link removed])
** CSIS LinkedIn ([link removed])
** CSIS YouTube ([link removed])
** CSIS Instagram ([link removed])

Connect w/ H. Andrew Schwartz

** 4bde2700-3f50-471c-8398-aaf2d39e7ea7.png ([link removed])
** a4a0cd19-112c-4480-b04d-b5fc26ca3857.png ([link removed])
** 7ad0947c-e23a-43b0-bc32-0720c3c5361a.png (mailto:[email protected]?subject=Evening%20CSIS)
Copyright © 2020 Center for Strategic & International Studies, All rights reserved.

202-887-0200 | ** www.CSIS.org ([link removed])

Center for Strategic & International Studies
1616 Rhode Island Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
USA

** Click here to edit your subscription preferences ([link removed])
or ** Click here to stop receiving all emails from CSIS. ([link removed])
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis