Piet de Klerk, Former chief negotiator for the 2014 Nuclear Security Summit in The Hague
Robert Floyd, Director General of the Australian Safeguards and Non-Proliferation Office
Jun 11, 2018
Despite decades of strategic arms-control agreements and unilateral disarmament, the international community has no standardized way to guarantee that a country claiming to disarm is actually doing so.
Ted Galen Carpenter, Senior Fellow, Randolph Bourne Institute
May 09, 2018
The initial steps that Kim and Moon have taken are encouraging, and they provide the foundation for a lasting peace on the Peninsula. But they are just initial steps, and many thorny obstacles remain.
Zhang Tuosheng, Academic Committee Member at Institute for Global Cooperation and Understanding, Peking University
May 07, 2018
There are several possible outcomes to the DPRK nuclear issue.
Darcie Draudt, non-resident James A. Kelly Korean Studies fellow, Pacific Forum CSIS
May 02, 2018
If we’re optimistic about the outcomes from last week’s monumental inter-Korean summit, the positive overtures North Korean leader Kim Jong-un seems to be making bode well for the Korean Peninsula. In anticipation of the upcoming Trump-Kim summit, American negotiators should note that being a bit more cautious with expectations and drawing lessons from past Korean negotiating behavior could lead to lasting change on the peninsula.
Li Zheng, Assistant Research Processor, China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations
Jia Chunyang, Assistant Research Fellow, CICIR
Li Yan, Deputy Director of Institute of American Studies, China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations
Feb 13, 2018
The Trump administration’s aggressive nuclear posture will deal a blow to nuclear non-proliferation.
He Wenping, Research Fellow, West Asia and Africa Studies Institute of the China Academy of Social Sciences
Jan 25, 2018
Irresponsible unilateral scrapping of the agreement will turn years of international cooperation into dust and ashes.
Yue Li, Senior Fellow, Pangoal Institution
Dec 14, 2017
It’s commonly acknowledged that North Korea won’t give up its nuclear weapon program anytime soon, so there’s no use being unhappy about it. It is also unhelpful to regret past opportunities to stop the program
Sun Ru, Research Professor & Deputy Director, CICIR
Dec 01, 2017
China and the U.S. have cooperated well on the North Korean nuclear issue. But recent U.S. actions puts this cooperation at risk.
Samuel S. Kim, Senior Research Scholar, Columbia University
Sep 01, 2017
To follow a common security approach that recognizes the interrelations and interdependencies between countries, Washington must step back and reassess the moral and practical implications of its foreign-policy commandment “Do as I say, Not as I do” when it comes to nuclear weapons.
Cui Lei, Research Fellow, China Institute of International Studies
Jul 18, 2017
Changing the goal from denuclearization to resuming talks is something worth trying, since other options are becoming dead ends or getting increasingly risky.