
Debate on how best the new U.S. administration and its international partners should engage Iran.

Jessica T. Mathews, Tom Burke and Laurence Tubiana on what the EU and the U.S. need to do to address climate change.

Panel of experts, including Kemal Dervis, on the global implications of the financial crisis.

Expectations are running high for major changes in the next U.S. administration's foreign policy, but how much change is likely, and will it be enough to close the gap between America and the world? Top experts from the Carnegie Endowment and elsewhere discussed this question during a two-day conference in Brussels.

Kazakhstan’s vast energy resources, rapidly growing economy, and important geographical position make the country a key player both in global energy markets and regional power relations. The Carnegie Endowment hosted H.E. Marat Tazhin, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kazakhstan, for a discussion of Kazakhstan’s position in an increasingly globalizing world.

European policy experts and government officials discussed the futre of the Europe-U.S. realtionship.

Experts discussed how the West can move forward with its relationship with Russia in the aftermath of the Georgian conflict.

Panel discussion on the expectations of China and India of the next U.S. president, and the rising importance of those expectations.

Remarks from Michael Cox and Jessica T. Mathews on the disappointment of European expectations of the U.S.

Ongoing violence in Pakistan serves as a constant reminder of the immense challenges facing President Asif Ali Zardari. U.S. efforts to effectively balance security and policy imperatives in this volatile region have not succeeded. The U.S. and Europe can develop a successful new strategy if they engage directly with Pakistan’s civil society while continuing to recognize the military’s importance.