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Trump Didn’t Invent Isolationism

In the News
Foreign Policy
Jordan Tama

History suggests the Republican Party will continue to argue over foreign policy beyond the MAGA era.

Former President Donald Trump stepping off his plane at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on August 24, 2023.
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy

From China to Mexico: Tracing the Deadly Fentanyl Trail

Podcast
Deep Dish on Global Affairs Podcast

Deep Dish confronts America’s deadly fentanyl crisis and the struggle to stop the flood of fentanyl from entering the country.

A bag of 4-fluoro isobutyryl fentanyl which was seized in a drug raid is displayed at the Drug Enforcement Administration
AP Photos
Global Health

Social Media for Farms: A Revolutionary Agricultural Tool

BLOG
Global Food for Thought by Natalie Burdsall

Social media can allow farmers to reach new audiences and ultimately inspire a new wave of young agriculturalists.

A farmer holds a tablet while sitting on tree root, observing his crops.
Sasin Tipchai
Food and Agriculture

Generational Attitudes in a New Nuclear Age

BLOG
Running Numbers by Coauthors

Millennials and Gen Z are less confident in the effectiveness and utility of nuclear weapons than Boomers and Gen X.

Young people pose in front of an Oppenheimer movie poster
AP Photos
Public Opinion

Trump and The "Elites vs. The Deplorables"

In the News
The Comedy Cellar: Live from the Table
Daniel W. Drezner

What does wealth inequality have to do with support for former president Trump? Nonresident Senior Fellow Dan Drezner explores the issue.

Crowd cheers and holds up "Trump 2024" signs, woman in a white jacket in the foreground with arms raised.
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy

GOP Candidates Spar over Funding the Ukraine War

In the News
The Conversation
Jordan Tama

Will the Republican Party stand for international engagement, democracy and freedom? Or will Republicans adopt a narrower, inward-looking vision?

Republican presidential candidates stand onstage during the first Republican primary presidential debate on August 23, 2023.
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy

Most Americans Don’t Know Much about Nuclear Weapons. But They Want to Know More

In the News
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Coauthors

Dina Smeltz and Sharon Weiner unpack results from a recent Council-Carnegie Corporation of New York Survey.

 a visitor to the Bradbury Science Museum in Los Alamos, N.M. examines a replica of the gadget
AP Photos
Public Opinion

Deepening the New US-Japan-Korea Trilateral Partnership

In the News
Politico
Ivo H. Daalder

The hope in Seoul and Tokyo is that even if Donald Trump is reelected, their partnership with Washington will be strong and resilient enough to survive.

South Korea's President Yoon Suk Yeol, President Joe Biden, and Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at Camp David on August 18, 2023.
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy

Trump Likely to Upstage Opponents Even as He Skips Debate

In the News
Voice of America
Jordan Tama

How consequential are debates typically for candidates? Nonresident Senior Fellow Jordan Tama discusses with VOA.

Screenshot of Jordan Tama speaking on VOA news with blue background Public Opinion

Do Nukes Make the US Safer? Americans Are Unsure

BLOG
Running Numbers by Libby Berry

While the public believes nuclear weapons are an effective tool in deterring aggression, less than half say they make the country more secure.

the mushroom cloud of the first atomic explosion at Trinity Test Site
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy