12 December 2017
RBI Warning On Bitcoin Is A Bit Of A Joke; Cryptos Are Here To Stay And We Need To Deal With Them
Leading Space Powers Are Investing Big In Constructing Next-Gen Space Stations, Why Isn’t India?
China Is Now Making Some of the Most Powerful Guns on the Planet
Kyle Mizokami
Why America Should Beware a Resurgent China
J. Michael Cole
Infographic Of The Day: China's Space Lab For Long Missions
On Sept. 15, 2016, China launched its uncrewed Tiangong-2 space lab to Earth orbit. Learn all about the spacecraft, which China views as a key step toward building a bona fide space station, in this infographic. The China Manned Space Engineering Office published a brief description of Tiangong-2 and its successor Tiangong-3 in 2008, indicating that at least two crewed spaceships would be launched to dock with Tiangong-2.
Recognize Jerusalem as Capital of Israel and Palestine
Ghanem Nuseibeh
Donald Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel is a grave mistake. Whenever there is a conflict in the Middle East, the city features prominently, whether or not the dispute is between Israel and its neighbours. Jerusalem has been targeted many times by warring parties seeking to draw the country into a wider regional conflict. Saddam Hussein, former Iraqi president, tried to do so during the first Gulf war of the early 1990s.
The Defeat And Survival Of The Islamic State
Why Syria Could Become the Black Hole of the Middle East
Daniel R. DePetris
An Emboldened Iran Has Begun to Seek out the Geopolitical Spotlight
Geneive Abdo
An Emboldened Iran Has Begun to Seek out the Geopolitical Spotlight
Geneive Abdo
Suck it up, Britain: now you know how to negotiate with the EU
Joris Luyendijk
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What on Earth Is Going on in Ukraine?
BY JOSH COHEN
The Strategic Impact of Making Jerusalem the Capital of Israel
By Anthony H. Cordesman
President Trump's announcement on December 6th that, "It is time to officially recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel," and that he is "directing the State Department to begin preparation to move the American embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem," will hurt both Israeli and U.S. strategic interests. Two critical problems: It damages Israel and U.S. interests by seriously irritating the Arab world, and it gives Iran, the Hezbollah, and Russia the opportunity to exploit this anger and the divisions. There was no earthly reason to provoke the Arab world. All President Trump had to do to help Israel was to ignore his campaign rhetoric and Israel's political hardliners, and do nothing. Every year since 1967, Israel has slowly created new facts on the ground in Jerusalem and on the West Bank. Jerusalem has become steadily more Jewish, and the Jewish areas in greater Jerusalem have expanded eastward to the point where they have virtually reached the edge of the slopes down to the Jordon River Valley.
The Globalization of Our Discontent
JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ
Globalization, which was supposed to benefit developed and developing countries alike, is now reviled almost everywhere, as the political backlash in Europe and the US in recent years has shown. The challenge is to minimize the risk that the backlash will intensify, and that starts by understanding – and avoiding – past mistakes. Fifteen years ago, I published Globalization and Its Discontents, a book that sought to explain why there was so much dissatisfaction with globalization within the developing countries. Quite simply, many believed that the system was “rigged” against them, and global trade agreements were singled out for being particularly unfair.
Counterintelligence in the Private Sector
By William Tucker
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Blockchains - What Are They? What Can We Expect?
by Elliott Morss
Introduction
I know very little about blockchains (BC), distributed ledger systems, and crypto-currencies such as Bitcoin. But I am a bit dumbfounded by the claims of what "the BC era" will bring. In what follows, I comment on some of these claims appearing in a paper written by Don and Alex Tapscott in the MIT Sloan Management Review. Quotes from the article start with BC. The lead-in to my comments is EM. Click on graphic below for larger image.
A Little Background
DoD spent $7.4 billion on big data, AI and the cloud last year. Is that enough?
By: Amber Corrin
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SPAWAR: Artificial intelligence should be the next space race
By: Mark Pomerleau
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Blockchains - What Are They? What Can We Expect?
by Elliott Morss
A Little Background
Analysts Explore Aircraft Carrier Alternatives
By Jon Harper
Here Is the U.S. Air Force's Crazy Plan to Kill Drones with Falcons
Task and Purpose Jared Keller
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