Chris, Melanie, and Zack discuss Gavin Wilde’s recent article in the Texas National Security Review on foreign media manipulation. How vulnerable are citizens of democracies to manipulation through social media? Is a more open and less hierarchical media space a national security threat? And what, if anything, should policymakers in democracies do about this issue? Grievances for China blocking popular apps, Marjorie Taylor Green for her shenanigans surrounding the foreign aid vote, and to the F-35, the gift that keeps on giving (to the tune of $2 trillion); Attas for Samuel Charap and Sergey Radchenko for an important article on Ukraine, to Mike Johnson for taking a principled stand on the foreign aid bill, and to the first Australian officers to participate in AUKUS nuclear submarine training.
This episode's reading.
Debating the Future of the Russo-Ukrainian War
America's Report Card in Southeast Asia
The 2024 Annual Threat Assessment
Competing for Influence in Latin America
Are the U.S. and Europe Never Ever Getting Back Together?
Debating the New National Defense Industrial Strategy
Rating the Top Threats to U.S. National Security
Global Disorder and Houthi Strikes
Entrapment, Entanglement, and the Debate about U.S. Alliances
The New Washington Consensus
Dysfunction in Washington
Is Washington Making a Bad Bet on India?
Paying the Costs of Competition
Multipolarity: What Is It Good For?
Technology, Defense, and American-Chinese Competition
Better Burden Sharing With Allies
Is AUKUS Flawed By Design?
Turkey's More Independent Foreign Policy
One Year of War in Ukraine
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