Sound Discussion EastWest Institute
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- News
Expert perspectives on global issues.
Sound Discussion podcast offers analysis and commentary by leaders, policymakers and scholars to help inform audiences and shape policy considerations to address pressing political, economic, cyberspace and security issues in regions such as Russia, Asia Pacific, South Asia, the Middle East and the Balkans.
EWI is a global network of influential stakeholders committed to and engaged in building trust and preventing conflict around the world.
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Eric Gomez and Caroline Dorminey: America’s Nuclear Crossroads
Cato Institute's Eric Gomez and Caroline Dorminey join EWI Senior Fellow Franz-Stefan Gady to discuss policy challenges confronting U.S. policymakers in the areas of nuclear deterrence and arms control.
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Tom Patterson: Tech-nationalism
Tom Patterson—chief trust officer and vice president of Global Security at Unisys—explains how tech-nationalism fits into today’s interconnected global world with EWI's Executive Vice President Bruce McConnell.
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Timo Koster: Cyber Diplomacy
Ambassador Timo Koster—career diplomat at the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ambassador-at-large for Security Policy and Cyber—discusses promising developments in cyber diplomacy and security with EWI's Executive Vice President Bruce McConnell.
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Zia Mian: Assessing the Nuclear Danger
Zia Mian - physicist, nuclear expert and co-director of Princeton University's Program on Science and Global Security - evaluates today’s nuclear arms threat, in conversation with Ambassador Cameron Munter.
Mian stresses the importance of focusing not just on long-term processes to shift the global narrative on nuclear weapons, but also to address the current circumstances that pose a discernible risk - such as India/Pakistan, and U.S. relations with Iran or South China Sea tensions.
The discussion also delves into climate change prediction models, which indicate that a very limited regional nuclear conflict would have an incredibly destructive impact. “Even use of 50 nuclear weapons each between India and Pakistan, a third of their nuclear arsenals, could lead to catastrophic fires that would cloud the sky across most of the world, and produce a catastrophic failure of agriculture and ecosystems that would last for more than 20 years.”
“As we begin to see these inadvertent and unexpected dangers of regional nuclear crisis, the urgency of intervention becomes greater, but the problem of intervention has become harder because of decades of neglect for other geopolitical and geo-strategic reasons,” Mian concludes. -
Esther Dyson: The Internet's Evolving Impact on Society
Esther Dyson—noted angel investor, best-selling author and philanthropist—discusses the digital world's past, present and future with EWI's Executive Vice President Bruce McConnell.
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Alexander Lanoszka: Nuclear Weapons in International Politics
Alexander Lanoszka, nuclear strategy expert and author, joins EWI Senior Fellow Franz-Stefan Gady to discuss the role of nuclear weapons in international political strategy. Lanoszka helps explore the current risk-areas for proliferation, the likelihood of nuclear weapon use in warfare and the strategic role that nuclear weapons play in international diplomacy.