Commentary

The international relations academic paper is dead
The international relations academic paper is dead

I’m reading acacdemic papers written about Korea from the 1950s. You can tell these papers would have been shared among colleagues, perhaps even discussed in closed-door seminars or cited in speeches. These academic papers mattered.

2025 05 09

East Asian scholars for hire
East Asian scholars for hire

Every funded op-ed adds more distrust to the world of misinformation, disinformation, and post-truth society where scholars are less respected and repeated talking points more effective.

2025 05 09

A turning point in U.S. strategic thought on Asia
A turning point in U.S. strategic thought on Asia

The passing of Richard Armitage, Joseph Nye, Henry Kissinger, and just under ten years ago, Zbigniew Brzezinski, marks more than just the end of an era of iconic U.S. foreign policy thinkers. It symbolizes a broader intellectual shift.

2025 05 09

Korea policy in the age of narcissism
Korea policy in the age of narcissism

It is a strange time to be a thinktank policy analyst in Washington. On one hand, the policy papers keep coming—well-researched, sober, often sensible attempts to offer realistic paths forward on North Korea and the ROKUS alliance.

2025 05 07

Supercharged phishing and the North Korea Watcher
Supercharged phishing and the North Korea Watcher

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has changed the rules of phishing. It no longer relies on clumsy English or poorly spoofed addresses. Today, it’s powered by large language models (LLMs), social graph mining, and contextual mimicry.

2025 05 05

North Korea Watchers are just different
North Korea Watchers are just different

Are North Korea Watchers just different? Or is there more to their distinct proclivities? We’ve all felt it before. At least, anyone who’s spent more than their fair share of time amidst North Korea Watchers, has felt it before. A disturbingly acute sense that not all is quite right.

2025 05 04

An international Commission on the Korean Peninsula
An international Commission on the Korean Peninsula

For decades, diplomacy on the Korean Peninsula has been trapped in a rigid and repetitive cycle, largely shaped by the strategic interests of others. American security priorities, Chinese strategic concerns, Russian opportunism, and Japanese anxieties have each carved deep grooves into how the world thinks about Korea.

2025 04 29

Transactional diplomacy started in Seoul, not Washington
Transactional diplomacy started in Seoul, not Washington

Trump just said out loud what had been true for seventy years: The alliance was always for sale. It was always a transaction. The challenge now is ensuring that it is a valuable transaction - and this is where Trump will fail.

2025 04 28

Trump tariff reversals a blow to American credibility in Korea
Trump tariff reversals a blow to American credibility in Korea

The Trump administration's decision to substantially reduce tariffs on Chinese imports marks a shift in what started out not as coherent trade policy but as macho bluster. That macho bluster became all but weak and sterile with China, but is still biting and bullying with South Korea.

2025 04 24

Tariffs and an anti-American turn in South Korea
Tariffs and an anti-American turn in South Korea

Anti-American sentiment in South Korea has always lingered just beneath the surface — a low hum that occasionally roars to life when diplomatic friction exposes the asymmetries in the alliance.

2025 04 23