(1/11) Russia’s attack on Ukraine will reverberate far beyond the borders of the two countries, and our faculty and fellows have been analyzing the global implications of this fast-moving crisis ⤵️
(2/11) Yesterday on @GBH, HKS’s @JulietteKayyem discussed what the crisis means for U.S. security ken.sc
(3/11) “There will be the potential for cyber-attacks, what we call non-kinetic attacks by Russia to try make noise at this stage. It matters that the U.S. is unified & that our political parties be unified in condemning Putin. Putin will use our divisions”
—HKS’s @JulietteKayyem
—HKS’s @JulietteKayyem
(4/11) In his analysis in @ForeignPolicy, HKS’s @stephenWalt shared what he sees as an imbalance in resolve and capabilities ken.sc
(5/11) “When your opponent has local military superiority and cares more about the outcome than you do, resolving a dispute typically requires some adjustments on your part. This isn’t a question of right or wrong; it’s a question of leverage.”
—HKS’s @stephenWalt
—HKS’s @stephenWalt
(6/11) HKS’s @jasonfurman discusses the economic consequences of the Ukraine war ken.sc
(7/11) “The longer-term economic consequences for the rest of the world will be far less severe than they are for Russia, but they will still be a persistent challenge for policymakers.”
—HKS’s @jasonfurman
—HKS’s @jasonfurman
(8/11) @BelferCenter’s @lzxdc analyzes Russia’s cyberwarfare capabilities and what a cyberattack against the U.S. might look like ken.sc
(9/11) @BelferCenter’s Paul Kolbe, who developed knowledge of the former Soviet Union during his career in the CIA, says that “this is the ideal example of exactly where we should be walking the walk and not just talking the talk” ken.sc
(11/11) “How Beijing responds will reveal just how transactional the revived relationship between China and Russia is, and whether China is willing to damage further its international reputation by throwing itself behind Russia in the face of Western hostility.”
—HKS’s Tony Saich
—HKS’s Tony Saich
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