May 2: Debate-Negotiations Can Denuclearize North Korea

Georgetown University and Intelligence Squared U.S. Debate: Negotiations Can Denuclearize North Korea

Join U.S. Intelligence Squared and Georgetown University at the 2018 Georgetown University Women’s Forum for a night at the Newseum for a lively debate on the motion:

RSVP here

Negotiations Can Denuclearize North Korea

Pre-Debate Reception: 6:30 – 7:30 p.m. | Newseum Great Hall of News

Keynote Conversation and Debate: 7:30 – 9:00 p.m. | Newseum Walter & Leonnore Annenberg Theater

The Motion

How should the United States respond to North Korea’s rapidly advancing nuclear capabilities? Some experts suggest the upcoming summit between President Trump and Kim Jong-un might provide a pivotal diplomatic opportunity to persuade North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons – especially in light of the announcement of harsh new sanctions. But others are more pessimistic, arguing that we’ve been down this road before and that denuclearizing North Korea is more of a pipedream than a legitimate strategic goal. Can Trump and Kim strike a deal to halt North Korea’s nuclear aggression? Or will the talks inevitably fail, heightening tensions and increasing the likelihood of fatal miscalculations?  

Suki Kim, Award-Winning Author & Investigative Journalist

Suki Kim is a novelist, investigative journalist, and the only writer ever to go live undercover in North Korea to investigate and write a book from the inside. Since 2002, she has traveled to North Korea, witnessing both Kim Jong-il’s 60th birthday celebrations as well as his death at age 69 in 2011. Her best-selling book of investigative literary nonfiction, “Without You, There Is No Us: Undercover Among the Sons of North Korean Elite,” sheds a new light on the understanding of the North Korean society. Kim’s first novel, “The Interpreter,” was a finalist for a PEN Hemingway Prize, and her nonfiction has appeared in New York Times, New York Review of Books, Washington Post, Slate, and The New Republic, where she is a contributing editor. A recipient of a Guggenheim, a Fulbright, and a George Soros Foundation’s Open Society fellowship, Kim has been featured on CNN’s Fareed Zakaria’s GPS, Amanpour on PBS, and The Daily Show.

The Debaters

FOR: Suzanne DiMaggio, Director, The U.S.-Iran Initiative & Senior Fellow, New America

Suzanne DiMaggio is a director and senior fellow at New America, where she focuses on U.S. foreign policy, the Middle East, and Asia. She has been leading Track 1.5 and Track 2 diplomatic initiatives on regional security, terrorism, nonproliferation, and governance for nearly 20 years. DiMaggio is currently directing a U.S.-DPRK dialogue that has included several visits to North Korea, most recently in February 2017. As part of that process, she facilitated the first official discussions between the Trump administration and North Korean government representatives in Oslo in May 2017. Before joining New America, DiMaggio was the vice president of global policy programs at the Asia Society and the vice president of policy programs at the United Nations Association of the USA. She is a frequent commentator in the news media and her op-eds have appeared in national and international press outlets.

  FOR: Bonnie Jenkins (L’94), Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution & Former Ambassador, U.S. State Department

Ambassador Bonnie Jenkins is a non-resident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution where she focuses on nuclear security, weapons of mass destruction and geopolitics. In 2009, she was nominated by President Barack Obama as the Department of State’s Coordinator for Threat Reduction Programs in the Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation. In her role, she promoted the coordination of Department of State Cooperative Threat Reduction and U.S. government programs in chemical, biological, nuclear and radiological security, and was the Department of State lead on the Nuclear Security Summit. Jenkins is the founder and president of Woman of Color Advancing Peace and Security and has taught at Georgetown University Law School, where she earned an LL.M. in international and comparative law. A retired Naval Reserve officer, she completed a year-long deployment to U.S. Central Command and received numerous awards for her service.

AGAINST: Sue Mi Terry, Former CIA Analyst & Senior Fellow, CSIS

Sue Mi Terry is a senior fellow with the Korea Chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. Prior to joining CSIS, she had a long and distinguished career in academia, policymaking, and intelligence, serving as the deputy national intelligence officer for East Asia at the National Intelligence Council from 2009 to 2010, the director for Korea, Japan, and Oceanic affairs at the National Security Council from 2008 to 2009, and a senior analyst on Korean issues at the CIA from 2001 and 2008. She has received numerous awards for her leadership and mission support, including the CIA Foreign Language award in 2008. Terry is a regular contributor to the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Washington Post, Foreign Affairs, and other publications.

AGAINST: Mira Rapp-HooperSenior Research Scholar, Yale

Mira Rapp-Hooper is a senior research scholar at Yale Law School and a senior fellow at Yale’s Paul Tsai China Center. She studies and writes on U.S.-China relations and national security issues in Asia. Rapp-Hooper was formerly a senior fellow with the Asia-Pacific Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, a fellow with the Center for Strategic and International Studies Asia Program, and the director of the CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative. Rapp-Hooper’s academic writings have appeared in Political Science Quarterly, Security Studies, and Survival, and her analysis is published in The National Interest, Foreign Affairs, The Washington Quarterly, The New York Times, and The Washington Post. She is a David Rockefeller Fellow of the Trilateral Commission, an associate editor with the International Security Studies Forum, and a senior editor at War on the Rocks.

About Intelligence Squared U.S. Debates

A non-partisan, non-profit organization, Intelligence Squared U.S. was founded in 2006 to address a fundamental problem in America: the extreme polarization of our nation and our politics. Their mission is to restore critical thinking, facts, reason, and civility to American public discourse. The award-winning debate series reaches over 30 million American households through multi-platform distribution, including radio, television, live streaming, podcasts, interactive digital content, and on-demand apps on Roku and Apple TV. With over 140 debates and counting, Intelligence Squared U.S. has encouraged the public to “think twice” on a wide range of provocative topics. Author and ABC News correspondent John Donvan has moderated IQ2US since 2008.

June 1: Korean Cultural Center Exhibition Opening

Artistic Records exhibition explores art as a record of the emotional past, in works by four Korean contemporary artists

The Korean Cultural Center Washington, D.C. proudly presents Artistic Records, a new group exhibition opening June 1 featuring painting and sculpture works by four contemporary Korean artists—Erin Chon, Doo Hee Chung, Hyun Jung Kim and Jae Young Park—whose striking and intimate art serves as a record of personal experiences and key moments in life, memorializing the often-overlooked value of the everyday.
Approaching their art as a record itself, in contrast with a record of art that one might study, these artists conceive their art as a medium to study oneself and investigate an essential question: ‘Who am I?’ In doing so, they employ a diversity of visual techniques, such as repetition, realism, and symbolism. Each artist has lived in both Korea and the United States, experiencing a juxtaposition of cultures and social environments that provide ample sense of perspective, a personal journey, and a tendency for their art to represent a record of memories. 
 
Admission to the opening reception event including talks by the artists on Friday, June 1 at 6:00 p.m. is free and open to the public.  Artistic Records will remain on view through June 28, 2018.
WHAT: Art exhibition, artist talks, & public opening reception
WHO:  Erin Chon, Doo Hee Chung, Hyun Jung Kim, and Jae Young Park
WHEN: Opening Reception: Friday, June, 1 at 6:00 pm
On View: June 1 – 28, 2018 (open M-F, 9am-noon & 1:30-5:30pm)
WHERE: Korean Cultural Center Washington, D.C. (2370 Massachusetts Ave. NW)
HOW: RSVP here
 
NOTE: Doors open at 5:30 pm for the opening reception event, and the program starts at 6:00 pm, including artist talks, 6:00-6:30 pm.

April 30: ICAS Spring Symposium Special

ICAS  Spring Symposium Special


US Senate Dirksen Office Building Room SD 562
First Street NE and Constitution Ave
Washington, DC 20002

Humanity, Liberty, Peace and Security

The Korean Peninsula Issues
and United States National Security*

April 30, 2018   Monday   1:00 pm – 5:00 pm

RSVP

Chair Synja P Kim (ICAS Fellow, President and Chairman)
Moderator Sang Joo Kim (ICAS Senior Fellow & Executive Vice President)
Speakers
Dong Bok Lee ( Senior Research Fellow, New Asia Research Institute, Republic of Korea)
The Trump and Kim Summit: A Road Map to the Tete-a-Tet
Oriana Skylar Mastro (ICAS Fellow; Assistant Professor Security Studies School of Foreign Service Georgetown University)
Sino – US Relations and The Korean Peninsula Issues
Rachel Oswald (Foreign Policy Reporter, Congressional Quarterly)
The View from Washington on recent South Korean and Chinese Summits with Kim Jong Un and What They Forebode for President Trump
Discussants
Joseph Bosco (ICAS Fellow; East Asia Security Consultant; Office of Secretary of Defense retired)
William Brown (ICAS Fellow; Adjunct Professor School of Foreign Service Georgetown University)
Dan Gallington (ICAS Fellow; former Special Assistant for Policy to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld)
Dennis Halpin (ICAS Fellow; Visiting Scholar SAIS JHU; former diplomat State Department)
Peter Huessy (ICAS Fellow; Director Strategic Deterrence Studies, Mitchell Institute, US Air Force Association)
Tong Kim (ICAS Fellow; Washington correspondent and columnist for The Korea Times )
David Maxwell (ICAS Fellow; Associate Director Security Studies Program Georgetown University)
John Merrill (ICAS Fellow; former Chief Northeast Asia Division Bureau Intelligence Research US State Dept)
Larry Niksch (ICAS Fellow; Senior Associate CSIS)
Tara O (ICAS Fellow; Adjunct Fellow CSIS Pacific Forum)
Michael Pillsbury (ICAS Fellow; Director Chinese Strategy Study Hudson Institute; Consultant US Defense Dept)
* as a public service pro bono publico
** ICAS designates this educational activity for continuing education/professional development for a maximum of 4.00 hours credit commensurate with the extent of actual participation.
 ICAS is not an agent of any government and/or a foreign principal (18 U.S.C.951), and solely supported by voluntary contributions.
 1.8 million Korean-Americas reside in the USA (Census 2015) .
 ICAS Liberty Foundation seeks to promote the cause of humanity, liberty, peace, prosperity and security through cultural, educational and research activities.

Moon Jae-in and Donald Trump shaking hands

June 5: CSIS ROK-U.S. Strategic Forum

ROK-U.S. Strategic Forum 2018

Organized by the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the Korea Foundation

RSVP

Please join us for a timely discussion with scholars, experts, opinion leaders, and former government officials from the United States and Korea who will participate in a series of panel discussions focused on the challenges and opportunities for the U.S.-ROK alliance, North Korea policy, regional relations among China, Japan, and Korea, and how these will impact policy and strategy surrounding the Korean peninsula following the two historic summit meetings between the two Koreas and the United States and North Korea. We are co-hosting this event with the Korea Foundation, a leading organization of Korea’s international exchange and public diplomacy initiative.

9:30 AM | WELCOMING REMARKS

9:45 AM | KEYNOTE ADDRESS

10:45 AM | SESSION I: Assessing the Inter-Korean Summit

12:00 PM | LUNCHEON AND KEYNOTE CONVERSATION

1:15 PM | SESSION II: State of the Alliance: Security and Economy

2:45 PM | SESSION III: Implications of Summit Diplomacy for Northeast Asia Security and Economic Environment

4:00 PM | ADJOURNMENT

This event is made possible by the generous support of the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the Korea Foundation.

Dec. 11: U.S.-Korea Defense Acquisition and Security Cooperation

CSIS presents U.S.-Korea Defense Acquisition and Security Cooperation

This event will be webcast live.

Please join the CSIS Office of the Korea Chair and the International Security Program for a joint conference that aims to broaden the discussions on the U.S. and the Republic of Korea’s bilateral cooperation on defense acquisition policy and defense industrial technological base, as well as important issues pertaining to joint research and development programs between two countries.

9:00 AM | Opening Session

9:30 AM | Keynote Address

10:30 AM | Public Session I: Finding Opportunities to Facilitate ROK-U.S. Defense R&D Cooperation

11:30 AM | Public Session II: Promoting ROK-U.S. Cooperation in Aerospace Industry

12:30 PM | Adjournment

U.S.-Korea Defense Acquisition and Security Cooperation is co-hosted by Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA), Korea Institute for Industrial Economics and Trade (KIET), and Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI).

Dec. 1: CPRF at USIP: North Korea and Track 2 Diplomacy

Fri, December 1, 2017

1:30 PM – 2:45 PM EST

United States Institute of Peace

2301 Constitution Avenue Northwest

Washington, DC 20037

Register here.

The Conflict Prevention and Resolution Forum (CPRF) invites to you USIP on December 1 for an in-depth conversation on North Korea with former Labour Party member of the European Parliament Glyn Ford, and former Special Envoy for Six-Party Talks with North Korea, Ambassador Joseph R. DeTrani. USIP’s Senior Expert for North Korea Frank Aum will moderate.

With nearly 40 trips to North Korea and just back from his most recent trip, Mr. Ford will address security tensions between the United States and North Korea, the situation on the ground in North Korea, and the value of Track 2 non-governmental engagements with North Korea.

The conversation takes place from 1:30-2:45pm on December 1 at USIP, 2301 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington DC.

This event will be immediately followed by a live radio broadcast town hall hosted by The Takeaway’s Tod Zwellich and featuring Glyn Ford, Frank Aum, Jean Lee, and Anthony Ruggiero as panelists. CPRF attendees are encouraged to first attend the in-depth discussion on North Korea with Glyn Ford and stay through the afternoon for a more wide-ranging discussion on diplomacy and nuclear policy in the town hall. To attend the town hall, please register separately on USIP’s website here.

The Conflict Prevention and Resolution Forum (CPRF)

Since 1999, the Conflict Prevention and Resolution Forum has provided a monthly platform in Washington for highlighting innovative and constructive methods of conflict resolution. CPRF’s goals are to (1) provide information from a wide variety of perspectives; (2) explore possible solutions to complex conflicts; and (3) provide a secure venue for stakeholders from various disciplines to engage in cross-sector and multi-track problem-solving. The CPRF is traditionally hosted at SAIS and organized by the Conflict Management Program in conjunction with Search for Common Ground and is co-sponsored by a consortium of organizations that specialize in conflict resolution and/or public policy formulation.

Forum Principals:

Search For Common Ground

Alliance for Peacebuilding

U.S. Institute of Peace

George Mason University – School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution

Georgetown University – Conflict Resolution Program

Johns Hopkins University – Nitze School of Advanced International Studies Conflict Management Program

Dec. 5: Korean Traditional Musical Ensemble: Fairy Tale ‘Land of the Poet’

6th Showcase of 2017 Season OnStage Korea

Korean Traditional Music Ensemble, ‘Fairy Tale’ <Land of the Poet>

Tuesday, December 5 at 7:00pm
Studio Theatre(Mead Theatre)
1501 14th St NW, Washington, DC 20005

Tickets: Free with RSVP Here
For more information: Korean Cultural Center DC

[Contact]
E-mail: infodesk@koreaembassy.org
Phone: 202-797-6343

For the sixth and final Onstage Korea showcase of 2017, the Korean Cultural Center Washington, D.C. welcomes Fairytale, an innovative traditional Korean music band, for their Capital premiere on Dec. 5, 2017.

Formed in 2011, Fairytale’ score motto is to ‘communicate with the world through music.’ By creating music with pure sensibilities, the group strives to stay faithful to their namesake: pure, innocent, and emotional storytelling. Fairytale also aims to get up close and personal with their audiences through unique venues like busy streets and intimate theaters, but also a gripping stage presence in order to continually expand their artistic goals.

Fairytale’s music is based on Korean traditional music, but the group aims to achieve the perfect balance between traditional and contemporary styles. Fairytale will celebrate their Washington, D.C. premiere presenting a major repertoire, The Land of Poet, including High spiritWhat are you looking forUntil peonies bloomAfter raining, etc. This performance based on a story from a famous piece of Korean poetry blends narrative music with dramatic theater methods. Fairytale seeks to convey the emotions and rhythm of Korean poetry, delivered with their irresistible musical style.

PERFORMANCE ARTISTS
Yuseok Seo | Daegeum(Korean bamboo flute)
Yunjin Ko | Haegeum(Korean fiddle)
Joohee Kim | Geomungo(Korean zither)
Kyuyeon Kim | Percussion
Myeongseo Jang | Vocal
Youngjin Oh | Piano
Chami | Composer

Fairytale was selected in 2014 for the Traditional ING, a project by Jungdong Theater in Seoul, Korea that seeks out creative traditional artistic groups, where they presented a musical, The Report on the Earth from Little Prince. Fairytale sought out more original ways to intertwine story and music through their concert A Piece of Warm Word, which adopted the form of a music broadcast. They released their first album, Sway with the Fairy Dream, in 2013, and their second album Another Dream in 2015, which includes original vocal songs with the lyrics of poems set to nature-themed music. Fairytale was also selected to showcase their work at the Asia Pacific Music Meeting in 2015, a recognition of their performance potential in overseas markets.

Nov. 30: Russia and North Korea Nuclear Weapons

Russia and North Korean Nuclear Weapons

Wilson Center

6th Floor, Woodrow Wilson Center, One Woodrow Wilson Plaza, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC 20004

November 30, 2017, 9:00 am to 12:00 pm

Russia’s relations with North Korea are often ignored in the West, being overshadowed by China. Yet Russia has been a major player on the Korean Peninsula since the late 19th century. It was directly responsible for the creation of the North Korean state (the DPRK) and it still maintains a range of political, economic and social links. Indeed, Russia is now the only major country on more or less friendly terms with Pyongyang. We will therefore examine whether Russia can be engaged as a broker of negotiations over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs, especially as our failure to restrain North Korea’s nuclear and missile program to date suggests it is time for a new strategy.

This conference will present the findings of a year-long research project on the current state of Russian-North Korean relations and the implications for US policy.  The project has been conducted as a collaboration of researchers from the Foreign Policy Research Institute, Far Eastern Federal University in Vladivostok, Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), and the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Far Eastern Studies in Moscow.

 RSVP here.

Agenda

9:00 a.m.  Welcoming Remarks

9:10 a.m. Panel 1: Russian-North Korea Relations

Presenters:

  • Artyom Lukin, Assoc. Professor of International Relations and Deputy Director of Research, School of Regional and International Studies, Far Eastern Federal University, Vladivostok
  • Georgy Toloraya , Director, Asian Strategy Center, Institute of Economics, Russian Academy of Science, Professor, Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO)

Commentators

  • Chris Miller, Research Director, Eurasia Program, Foreign Policy Research Institute, Assistant Professor of International History, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
  • Benjamin Katzeff Silberstein, Associate Scholar, FPRI

Moderator

10:35 Panel 2:  Implications for US Policy 

Presenters

Commentators

  • Sue Mi Terry, Senior Advisor for North Korea, Bower Group Asia
  • Jenny Town, Assistant Director, US-Korea Institute at SAIS, Johns Hopkins University

11:50 Adjournment/ Closing Remarks  

Nov. 15: Getting South Korea to Go Greener

The Korea Economic Institute of America presents:

Wednesday, November 15, 2017
12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.

KEI Conference Facility
1800 K St NW | Suite 300
Washington, DC 20006

Getting South Korea to Go Greener

Many large South Korean companies have followed a trend among industrialized countries by embracing environmental protection and sustainability. Korean consumers, investors, and policy initiatives have all contributed to South Korean firms “going green” in recent years. However, despite this heightened interest in environmental responsibility, there is limited understanding of which types of sustainable activities Korean firms have implemented and, consequently, how much these practices are contributing to global sustainability.

Please join KEI and environmental governance expert Younsung Kim for a discussion of her new research on sustainability practices employed by large South Korean firms, including how they can be improved to further the interests of stakeholders and protect the environment.

Featuring: 

Younsung Kim 
Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Policy
Schar School of Policy and Government
George Mason University

Moderated by:

Kyle Ferrier
Director of Academic Affairs and Research
Korea Economic Institute of America

To RSVP for this event, 
please click here.

Nov. 15: Reaching a Peaceful Solution to the North Korea Nuclear Crisis Through Dialogue

Reaching a Peaceful Solution to the North Korea Nuclear Crisis Through Dialogue

by The US-Korea Institute

Wed, November 15, 2017

10:00 AM – 11:30 AM EST

LOCATION

Kenney Auditorium

1740 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest

Washington, DC 20036

Register Here

DESCRIPTION

The US-Korea Institute at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) presents a discussion with Hon. CHOO Mi-ae, the Chairperson of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (Minjoo Party), and Ambassador Robert Gallucci, the Chairman of the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins SAIS.

Following the discussion on inter-Korean relations and the security environment in Northeast Asia, a Q&A session will follow.