Twitter | Busca | |
Richard N. Haass
President, Council on Foreign Relations. Author, A World in Disarray (). Opinions my own; RTs/follows not endorsements
5.986
Chíos
752
Seguindo
129.550
Seguidores
Chíos
Richard N. Haass 1 h
the Trump administration erred by making the unobtainable goal of denuclearization the centerpiece of what became a stillborn summit. the question going forward is whether it can avoid both catastrophic failure and catastrophic success.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 23 h
my latest for on cancellation of summit. For NK, Iran, and China trade, the Trump admin will have to decide betw what it wants and what is possible. All-or-nothing foreign policy will lead to failed diplomatic gambits, like this one, or conflict.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 24 de maio
The summit was bound to fail as admin badly overestimated what NK would agree to; the issue was/is US willingness to accept an outcome short of total denuclearization. All or nothing foreign policy w NK, Iran, China trade risks producing nothing or conflict.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass rechouchiou
Colgate University 23 de maio
Colgate commencement address by Richard Haass () featured on MSNBC Morning Joe ()
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass rechouchiou
CFR 23 de maio
Tomorrow, David M. Rubenstein, , , Nathan Sheets, and discuss the causes and consequences of U.S. debt. Watch live at 5:30pm ET:
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 23 de maio
. wrong to blame China for ?s re planned summit. Should blame himself and his nat sec advisor for suggesting only acceptable summit outcome would be NK giving up all its nuclear capabilities, something NK will not sign up for.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass rechouchiou
CFR Campus 22 de maio
"I hope you will leave this campus more committed than before to studying and then doing something about the issues certain to shape your future," says at 's commencement address. Read the transcript:
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 22 de maio
my conversation with on the possibly upcoming US-NK summit
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 21 de maio
Respondendo a @BobLitan @Cfr
Thank you Bob. My attempt to make the case for students becoming informed, active citizens and to get involved in three of what will likely be the big issues/most likely crises of the 21st century and their lives.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 21 de maio
. failed to make case for why US better off abrogating JCPOA now when nuclear limits still good for a decade. US could use time to combat Iran regional push and sign allies up to follow-on pact to extend/broaden limits on Iran nucs, missiles.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 21 de maio
At some point all-or-nothing diplomacy in which demand is piled upon demand morphs into a policy of regime change. That is where the Trump administration seems to be heading with North Korea and Iran. We will likely end end up with neither peaceful outcomes nor regime change.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 21 de maio
What you dont do can matter more than what you do. I am fortunate to have reached this point in life with few regrets. But those i do have stem most from things i failed to do and say when it mattered. Make your errors ones of commission, not omission.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 21 de maio
"Never forget that facts still matter. On 's seal are the words 'Deo ac Veritati.' For God and for truth. Your relationship with God is for you to decide, but your relationship with the truth must be unconditional."
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 21 de maio
'today's graduates need to discard the notion that they have finished their education. that's why they call it "commencement," not "conclusion." Lifelong learning and periodic retraining will become the new normal.' from my commencement talk
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 21 de maio
here is text () & (video () of my commencement talk (starts at 3300 mark). theme was 3 slow-motion crises facing the US-disappearance of work, climate change, debt-and risk we would not act on them until it was too late.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 21 de maio
Respondendo a @artdoc07 @colgateuniv
thank you. was an honor and a treat to speak at the 2018 commencement.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 17 de maio
good overruled his national security advisor who had suggested the Libya precedent was what the US had in mind for the NK summit. This clarification increases the odds a summit will occur. It also means the summit is not doomed to fail.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 16 de maio
One other thought. If, as seems likely, it was reaching a level of nuclear and missile capability that gave NK the confidence to come to a summit rather than just pressure of sanctions and US threats, then NK rejection of US preconditions/demands for denuclearization predictable.
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 16 de maio
Wrong to simply describe NK’s latest statements as a “return to form”. It also reflects unrealistic US hopes/demands that NK agree to a demanding definition of denuclearization as a first step. All or nothing approach to diplomacy will likely yield nothing
Reply Retweet Gústame
Richard N. Haass 15 de maio
great to see high school seniors learning about foreign policy and how it is made. Hope others check out Model Diplomacy on and urge their high schools and colleges to use at least one of the realistic simulations:
Reply Retweet Gústame