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1. Counterterrorism from the Sky? How to Think Over the Horizon about Drones

2. The Challenge of European Political Will

3. U.S. Defense Posture in the Middle East

4. Indispensable: NATO’s Framework Nations Concept beyond Madrid

5. Resetting NATO’s Defense and Deterrence: The Sword and the Shield Redux

6. The Need for a New NATO Force Planning Exercise

7. North America Is a Region, Too: An Integrated, Phased, and Affordable Approach to Air and Missile Defense for the Homeland

8. Looking beyond the Biden Visit to the Middle East and the “Fist Bump”

9. Transforming European Defense

10. Software-Defined Warfare: Architecting the DOD's Transition to the Digital Age

11. The CNO’s Navigation Plan for 2022: A Critique

12. Renew SBIR, Just Defend the Recipients against China

13. Of Ships and Cyber: Transposing the Incidents at Sea Agreement

14. It's Moving Time: Taiwanese Business Responds to Growing U.S.-China Tensions

15. What If . . . Alternatives to a Chinese Military Invasion of Taiwan Image

16. Keeping the U.S. Military Engine Edge: Budget and Contract Trends

17. Baltic Conflict: Russia’s Goal to Distract NATO?

18. “Reunification” with Taiwan through Force Would Be a Pyrrhic Victory for China

19. NATO and the South after Ukraine

20. The Department of Defense Contributions to Pandemic Response

21. Russia Futures: Three Trajectories

22. CSIS European Trilateral Track 2 Nuclear Dialogues

23. Defense Acquisition Trends 2021

24. Beyond Foreign Military Sales: Opportunities to Enhance Japan-U.S. Defense Industrial Cooperation

25. Measuring Congressional Impact on Defense Acquisition Funding

26. How Will a Revival of the JCPOA Affect Regional Politics and Iranian Militias?

27. Battle Networks and the Future Force

28. U.S. Military Forces in FY 2022: Peering into the Abyss

29. Russia’s Losing Hand in Ukraine

30. Space Force or Space Corps?

31. The U.S. Department of Defense’s Role in Health Security

32. China’s New 2019 Defense White Paper

33. Achilles’ Heel: Adding Resilience to NATO’s Fragile Missile Shield

34. Acquisition of Software-Defined Hardware-Based Adaptable Systems

35. Understanding DoD’s Defense-Wide Zero-Based Review

36. U.S. Military Forces in FY 2020: The Strategic and Budget Context

37. What to Look for in the FY 2020 Defense Budget Request

38. War by Proxy: Iran’s Growing Footprint in the Middle East

39. Korea, the JCPOA, and the Shifting Military Balance in the Gulf

40. Spaceports of the World

41. Masterpiece Theater: Missed Opportunities for Missile Defense in the 2020 Budget

42. Acquisition Trends, 2018: Defense Contract Spending Bounces Back

43. Shifting the Burden Responsibly: Oversight and Accountability in U.S. Security Sector Assistance

44. Distributed Defense New Operational Concepts for Integrated Air and Missile Defense

45. The Return of Political Warfare

46. Oversight and Accountability in U.S. Security Sector Assistance

47. Trump’s 2019 Missile Defense Budget: Choosing Capacity over Capability

48. Russia's New Nuclear Weapons: Whoever Dies with the Most Toys Wins?

49. National Technology and Industrial Base Integration How to Overcome Barriers and Capitalize on Cooperation

50. Contested Seas Maritime Domain Awareness in Northern Europe

51. Shield of the Pacific: Japan as a Giant Aegis Destroyer

52. The U.S., NATO, and the Defense of Europe: Underlying Trends

53. The Evolution of U.S. Defense Posture in North and West Africa

54. The U.S. Defense Budget in FY2019: Underlying Trends

55. Transition in Afghanistan: Losing the Forgotten War?

56. European Defense Trends: Briefing Update

57. Theories on Why North Korea Rejects the World

58. The Iran Nuclear Agreement and Iranian Energy Exports, the Iranian Economy, and World Energy Markets

59. Amphibious Shipping Shortfalls

60. Chinese Military Modernization and Force Development: Chinese and Outside Perspectives

61. Security Transition in Afghanistan

62. U.S. Department of Defense Contributions to Malaria Elimination in the Era of Artemisinin Resistance

63. The Emirates Center and Gulf Think Tanks: The Next Twenty years

64. Federated Defense in Asia

65. Talking Technology Best Practices in Communicating

66. NATO's Posture after the Wales Summit

67. Leveraging Global Value Chains for a Federated Approach to Defense

68. Iran, Evolving Threats, and Strategic Partnerships in the Gulf

69. Nuclear Scholars Initiative: A Collection of Papers from the 2013 Nuclear Scholars Initiative

70. Cybersecurity and Stability in the Gulf

71. Cyber Threat and Response

72. Nuclear Notes

73. Improving the US-GCC Security Partnership: Planning for the Future

74. Realizing the Vision

75. Exploring New Ways to Provide Enduring Strategic Effects for the Department of Defense

76. Defense Cuts, Sequestration, and the US Defense Budget

77. Trends in Militancy across South Asia

78. The Civil-Military Challenge to National Security Spending

79. Chinese Military Modernization and Force Development

80. Iran's Present Day Military Capabilities and Military Aspirations in the Middle East

81. Changing US Security Strategy: The Search for Stability and the "Non-War" against "Non-Terrorism"

82. Offensive Cyber Capabilities at the Operational Level

83. Innovative Immigration and Border Control Reform

84. U.S.-India Homeland Security Cooperation: Building a Lasting Partnership via Transportation Sector Security

85. U.S. Department of Defense Contract Spending and the Supporting Industrial Base, 2000-2012

86. The Gulf Military Balance Volume II: The Missile and Nuclear Dimensions

87. Asian Defense Spending, 2000–2011

88. The FY2013 Defense Budget, Sequestration, and the Growing Strategy-Reality Gap

89. U.S.-India Defense Trade

90. Iran and the Gulf Military Balance II: The Missile and Nuclear Dimensions

91. Iran and the Gulf Military Balance - I: The Conventional and Asymmetric Dimensions

92. Chinese Military Modernization and Force Development: A Western Perspective

93. Afghanistan from 2012-2014: Is A Successful Transition Possible?

94. The FY2013 Defense Budget, the Threat of Defense Cuts and Sequestration and the Strategy-Reality Gap

95. Nuclear Notes

96. The Launch of the Project on U.S. Leadership in Development:The Role of Development in U.S. Foreign Policy and National Security

97. Interim Report-Planning for a Deep Defense Drawdown—Part I

98. U.S. Department of Defense Services Contract Spending and the Supporting Industrial Base, 2000-2011

99. The FY2013 Defense Budget, Deficits, Cost-Escalation, and Sequestration

100. Iraq and US Strategy in the Gulf: Shaping and Communicating US plans for the Future in a Time of Region-Wide Change and Instability