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Global Research Group

The Global Research Group explores strategic issues around the world.

 

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Global Issues

  • Slide for the external article What is Strategic Rivalry? Why Should We Care?

    By Antulio J. Echevarria II

    The states most likely to draw America into its next major crisis or war are not unknowns. They are the usual suspects: The same handful of states that have threatened the United States repeatedly across decades. Interstate rivals have caused roughly 80 percent of history’s wars and the odds of any given rivalry ending peacefully are little better than a coin toss. Yet America’s key strategy documents since the 2017 National Security Strategy have used phrases like great power competition, interstate strategic competition, and strategic competition without acknowledging the essential difference between a competition and a rivalry...

  • Slide for Conversations on Strategy episode: on The Impossible Mission:  The Office of Security Cooperation and the U.S. Forces Drawdown in Iraq

    In this episode of Conversations on Strategy, retired Lieutenant General Robert L. Caslen Jr. and historian Dr. Katelyn K. Tietzen-Wisdom discuss Caslen’s 2025 book, The Impossible Mission: The Office of Security Cooperation and the US Forces Drawdown in Iraq. The conversation explores the strategic challenges of the 2011 US drawdown in Iraq. The discussion highlights the complexities of war termination, highlighting the need to learn from the gap between policy expectations and on-the-ground reality.

  • Slide for SRAD Newsletter Q2 2026

    The Strategic Research & Analysis Department (SRAD) would like to share our analysis and insights on the strategic environment and geopolitical events from the past quarter. 

  • Slide for SSI Live Podcast Episode123: Obama and the Bomb

    In this episode of SSI Live, Major Brennan Deveraux interviews Dr. Frank Jones, a distinguished fellow of the US Army War College, on his recently published book Obama and the Bomb: New START, Russia, and the Politics of post-Cold War Arms Control. The conversation explores the historical significance of this now expired bi-lateral treaty and Frank’s assessment of the conditions required to achieve this type of great-power cooperation.