A new AI capability that delivers analysis-ready Media Intelligence. More than just a product launch, this is a shift in how communications teams monitor, understand and act on media coverage.
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
Mon, July 13th, 2026 1:00 PM - 1:45 PM (EDT) Program The American Statecraft Program develops and advances ideas for a more disciplined U.S. foreign policy aligned with American values and cognizant of the limits of American power in a more competitive world. Israel's image and credibility in the United States have fallen to an unprecedented low. A recent Pew poll revealed that 60 percent of American adults have an unfavorable view of Israel, especially among younger respondents.
Additional Links Program The American Statecraft Program develops and advances ideas for a more disciplined U.S. foreign policy aligned with American values and cognizant of the limits of American power in a more competitive world. Project Beyond Disruption is a multiyear, Carnegie-wide initiative that aims to identify conceptual building blocks that can help leaders reduce conflict and strengthen the world’s capacity to take on shared challenges in the emerging era.
Blog Strategic Europe offers insightful analysis, fresh commentary, and concrete policy recommendations from some of Europe’s keenest international affairs observers. The Europeans spent the winter worrying that the United States would agree a new Yalta with Russia. Such an agreement, the thinking went, would settle borders and the continent’s security order—in an arbitrary manner, above the heads of those concerned.
Blog Diwan, a blog from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s Middle East Program and the Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center, draws on Carnegie scholars to provide insight into and analysis of the region. On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched a massive, coordinated military operation against Iran.
Join Aaron David Miller in conversation with three former American negotiators: Robert Malley and Alan Eyre, members of the negotiating team for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) in 2015; and Michael Singh, former senior director for Middle East affairs at the National Security Council during President George W. Bush’s administration (2005-2008), to discuss the best path forward for the U.S. and Iran, on Carnegie Connects.
Thu, July 9th, 2026 2:00 PM - 3:00 PM (EDT) Program The Russia and Eurasia Program continues Carnegie’s long tradition of independent research on major political, societal, and security trends in and U.S. policy toward a region that has been upended by Russia’s war against Ukraine. Leaders regularly turn to our work for clear-eyed, relevant analyses on the region to inform their policy decisions.
Blog Emissary harnesses Carnegie’s global scholarship to deliver incisive, nuanced analysis on the most pressing international affairs challenges. A thousand days after October 7, 2023, much about the Middle East seems perversely familiar, yet much has changed. Gaza lies in ruins, with Israel occupying nearly 70 percent of the territory and Hamas governing the rest. The West Bank is simmering, with persistent violence by extremist settlers and land grabs as part of galloping annexation.
Additional Links Program The American Statecraft Program develops and advances ideas for a more disciplined U.S. foreign policy aligned with American values and cognizant of the limits of American power in a more competitive world. Program The Europe Program in Washington explores the political and security developments within Europe, transatlantic relations, and Europe’s global role.
In January 2026, a new online platform called Moltbook quietly appeared on the internet. Advertised as “the front page of the agent internet,” the platform resembled a familiar social network. Users formed communities, debated ideas, and organized collaborative projects. But Moltbook had one crucial difference: None of its users were human.
Introduction: When Bashar al-Assad's regime collapsed in December 2024, Syrians celebrated not just the end of a dictator, but the promise of a fundamentally different relationship between state and society, hoping for a brand-new social contract. Yet barely 18 months later, President Ahmed al-Sharaa's transitional government shows patterns of governance that are all too reminiscent of the Assad regime’s rule. Evidence examined in this paper suggests converging patterns worth examining.