Founded in 1910, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace is the oldest international affairs think tank in the United States. Our work is nonpartisan and dedicated to achieving practical results. We aim to provide foreign policy makers with the information, analysis, and resources they need to make better-informed decisions.
Moisés Naím explains why the leadership of the International Monetary Fund should be open to any qualified candidate from anywhere in the world.
President Obama must acknowledge that the time when Western leaders could view the Arab world through the eyes of its rulers is over, writes Nathan Brown.
Moisés Naím explains five critical factors why the United States and Europe have focused on removing Qaddafi from power in Libya while not taking similar action against Assad in Syria.
Washington should be worried about the increasing prominence of Anwar al-Awlaki, the popular Yemeni-American preacher, explains Christopher Boucek.
Rebuilding trust requires working together to build Pakistan’s economy, energy sector, and regional trade, write Toby Dalton and George Perkovich.
The first six months of this year have not been easy for the Egyptian economy, and the situation is likely to worsen amid a drop in tourism revenues, low levels of domestic and foreign investments, and scarce employment opportunities in the formal private sector.
The recent Fukushima Daiichi crisis has prompted the State Council of China to temporarily halt approval of new nuclear plants pending a comprehensive safety review. The outcome will have major implications for China’s nuclear industry and for its entire energy future.
Ankara’s aim is to assert its position in NATO and shape the transatlantic alliance so that it becomes an organisation that more closely mirrors its own objectives.
If Michael McFaul is confirmed as the next U.S. ambassador to Russia, one of his chief tasks will be changing the nature of the strategic relations between the United States and Russia from an adversarial one and toward a cooperative one where neither party regards the other as a potential adversary.