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  1. 2024年4月12日 · Richard Fontaine is the Chief Executive Officer of CNAS. He served as President of CNAS from 2012–19 and as Senior Fellow from 2009–12. Prior to CNAS, he was foreign policy advisor to Senator John McCain and worked at the State Department, the National Security Council (NSC), and on the staff of the Senate Foreign Relations ...

  2. Richard Fontaine is an American foreign policy analyst currently serving as CEO of the Center for a New American Security (CNAS). [1] [2] Education. Born in New Orleans, Fontaine holds a BA in international relations from Tulane University and a MA in International affairs from Johns Hopkins University SAIS . Career.

  3. Richard Fontaine. Geoffrey Gertz. Noah Greene. Kate Johnston. Andrea Kendall-Taylor. Emily Kilcrease. Katherine L. Kuzminski. Nicholas Lokker. Jonathan Lord. Gibbs McKinley. Andrew Metrick. Carisa Nietsche. Stacie Pettyjohn. Paul Scharre. Philip Sheers. Jacob Stokes. Taren Sylvester. Adam H. Tong. Josh Wallin. Becca Wasser. Caleb Withers.

  4. 2019年2月21日 · Washington, February 21, 2019 – The Center for a New American Security (CNAS) Board of Directors has selected Richard Fontaine, president of CNAS and former foreign policy advisor to Senator John McCain, as the Center’s new Chief Executive Officer.

    • The Friend of My Enemy
    • Friends, Money, and Time
    • Berlin Or Laos?
    • A More Useful Debate

    This was not the situation that U.S. President Joe Biden thought he would encounter when he took office. During his initial months as president, administration officials repeatedly called for a “stable and predictable” relationship with Russia, one in which Moscow would abjure bad international behavior and allow Washington to devote more focus to ...

    The solution proposed most often is to work with allies and partners. China and Russia’s economic weight and military strength are formidable, but the combined might of the United States and its allies is greater still. The U.S. alliance structure, augmented by new and non-allied partners, represents a central advantage for Washington. Russia has B...

    Priority-setting is one of the easiest actions to invoke and one of the hardest things to do. Even if a rough consensus is possible about which areas and issues matter most and should therefore become the focus of U.S. activity, the necessary corollary is that other domains matter far less and should receive little to no attention and resources. As...

    Actions by Moscow or Beijing that would contest key principles of international order, constrict the United States’ freedom to act, or undermine the domestic functioning of foreign countries should broadly define what’s most important. More specifically, policymakers should focus most on actions in the places and on the issues where the potential d...

  5. 2024年3月18日 · This conversation with Richard Fontaine – CEO of the Center for a New American Security in Washington, D.C. and co-author, with Robert Blackwill, of “Lost Decade: The U.S. Pivot to Asia and the...

  6. Richard Fontaine is Chief Executive Officer of the Center for a New American Security. He served as President of CNAS from 2012–19 and before that as Senior Fellow from 2009–12. Prior to his time at CNAS, he was foreign policy adviser to Senator John McCain and worked at the US State Department, the National Security Council, and on the ...