Carnegie Endowment
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The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace is a private, nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing cooperation between nations and promoting active international engagement by the United States. Founded in 1910, its work is nonpartisan and dedicated to achieving practical results.
As it celebrates its Centennial, the Carnegie Endowment is pioneering the first global think tank, with flourishing offices now in Washington, Moscow, Beijing, Beirut, Brussels, and New Delhi. These six locations include the centers of world governance and the places whose political evolution and international policies will most determine the near-term possibilities for international peace and economic advance. Source
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| Scope | International |
|---|---|
| Language | Arabic, English, Russian |
| Country | United States of America |
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Recent Articles
Search ArticlesData Centers Are Fine, Actually
The missing context that shows how AI isn’t the resource hog everyone thinks it is – with Andy Masley. By Jon Bateman and Andy Masley Published on Jul 17, 2026 Subscribe on Data centers may be the most controversial objects in America. They’re blamed for draining water reservoirs, stressing electrical grids, and driving up utility bills. Communities throughout the country are pushing back and seeking moratoria.
Carnegie’s Summer Beach Reads
Blog Emissary harnesses Carnegie’s global scholarship to deliver incisive, nuanced analysis on the most pressing international affairs challenges. Born in Blacknessby Howard W. French The interwebs say that when reading to newborns, the sound of a parent’s voice is more important than the content of the material itself—so I took that literally during the summer of 2022, when Kid 2 and I devoured Born in Blackness.
Taking the Pulse: Enough with the Annual NATO Summits, Already?
Max Bergmann Director, Europe, Russia, and Eurasia Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) I was firmly of the view that NATO needed a break from its summits. Yet, the outcomes at Ankara changed my mind. There were genuine breakthroughs of European cooperation on defense procurement and in areas critical to reducing dependence on the United States. The summit provided a forcing function to get these agreements done.
What Is the Future of NATO?
Podcast host Alex Gabuev is joined by Nate Reynolds, a senior fellow at Carnegie’s Russia and Eurasia Program, to discuss transatlantic security and its future after the recent NATO summit in Ankara. By Alexander Gabuev and Nate Reynolds Published on Jul 16, 2026 Subscribe on Blog Carnegie Politika is a digital publication that features unmatched analysis and insight on Russia, Ukraine and the wider region.
What’s Driving the Trump Administration’s Push to Dismantle the ICC?
Blog Emissary harnesses Carnegie’s global scholarship to deliver incisive, nuanced analysis on the most pressing international affairs challenges. Program Carnegie’s Global Order and Institutions Program identifies promising new multilateral initiatives and frameworks to realize a more peaceful, prosperous, just, and sustainable world. That mission has never been more important, or more challenging.
Europe from Scratch: Visions for a New European Order
In recent months and years, many European leaders have suggested that the European project needs a fundamental redesign. Such calls have become ubiquitous over time. They were numerous during the eurozone crisis after 2009. They multiplied in the wake of Brexit and the migration surge in the late 2010s. They were heard again during the COVID-19 pandemic and became even more widespread after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
AI in Outer Space: Opportunities, Risks, & Governance Gap
Project This program focuses on five sets of imperatives: data, strategic technologies, emerging technologies, digital public infrastructure, and strategic partnerships.
European Sycophancy Worked on Trump
As it turns out, sometimes slow, steady, and subservient isn’t the worst policy. Especially with razor-thin margins of maneuver. When top European leaders started implementing a coordinated strategy predicated on obsequious deference to U.S. President Donald Trump, the odds of it producing anything beyond embarrassment and disappointment were slim.
How NATO Became Anchored in the Black Sea
NATO has long been the bogeyman Russia points to in justifying its aggression against Ukraine. Paradoxically, Moscow’s 2022 full-scale invasion of its neighbor has turned the alliance’s expansion into a self-fulfilling prophecy. The creeping NATO-ization of the Black Sea is a case in point. The organization’s July 7–8 summit in Ankara showed that the alliance is more involved in the area than ever.
How Europe Fights Russia Without the U.S.
Sophia Besch games out NATO’s future, Baltic scenarios, German rearmament, and Europe’s next way of war. By Jon Bateman and Sophia Besch Published on Jul 10, 2026 Subscribe on NATO’s future remains in doubt as Donald Trump again threatens to pull U.S. troops from Europe. But the practical stakes of these debates aren’t always clear. What military capabilities does Europe stand to lose? How long would it take to replace them? And how might Russia exploit any gap?