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America’s ISIS Jihadists Were Largely Duds - New Yorker

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

For all the hype about Americans joining isis, the majority never saw combat during the Islamic State’s three-year rule. They were largely marginal players in the jihadist caliphate—often working in menial jobs as cooks, mechanics, cleaners, or orderlies. In the end, many became...

Hijab Protests Expose Iran’s Core Divide - New Yorker

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

It was the quietest protest Iran has ever witnessed. Vida Movahed, a thirty-one-year-old mother of a toddler, stood atop a large utility box on Tehran’s busy Enghelab Street and removed the hijab head covering that all women are required to wear by law. Her jet-black hair cascaded far down her back. She then tied...

What’s at Stake for Trump at the Winter Olympics - New Yorker

Thursday, February 8, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

he hardest game at the Olympics won’t be played on the ice rinks, ski slopes, or luge runs in South Korea, where the United States is fielding the largest number of athletes among participating countries. The enduring legacy of the Pyeongchang Games will instead be whether they generate enough momentum...

Russia and Iran Deepen Ties to Challenge Trump and the United States - New Yorker

Friday, March 2, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

Last month, the former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met privately with Iran’s foreign minister, Javad Zarif, on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, a global gathering of foreign-policy glitterati. The diplomatic odd couple once met openly and often—more with each other than with any other foreign leaders—during two years of feisty negotiations over the Iran nuclear deal. No longer.

How do you solve a problem like Korea? - Vox Today Explained

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un made history today. Or did they? NPR’s Elise Hu was there. She explains what happened and what didn’t. Plus, The New Yorker’s Robin Wright recounts United States summit history. She says there are two keys to a successful summit, and Singapore's meeting lacked both.

Will North Korea Play Nuclear Hide-and-Seek with Trump? - New Yorker

Monday, July 2, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

In what would be the most accelerated disarmament program in history, the Trump Administration hopes to dismantle North Korea’s nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons, and its ballistic missiles, within a year, John Bolton, the national-security adviser, claimed on “Face the Nation” on Sunday. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo...

Why Assad is winning the war in Syria - PBS NewsHour

Saturday, April 14, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

With support from Russia, Iran and Hezbollah, the Assad regime has managed to consolidate power in most parts of Syria previously held by ISIS. Apart from Friday’s joint missile strikes, the U.S.’s role has been limited to diplomatic talks, which has yielded few results in sustaining ceasefires in the seven-year-long war. The New Yorker’s Robin Wright joins Hari Sreenivasan for more.

With Pompeo to Pyongyang, the U.S. Launches Diplomacy with North Korea - New Yorker

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

s many of us spent the weekend celebrating Easter brunch or a Passover Seder, Mike Pompeo secretly slipped into North Korea to test the prospects for President Trump’s most daring diplomatic gambit. The C.I.A. director’s covert talks with North Korea’s mercurial young leader, Kim Jong Un, apparently went well.