Stability at the Nuclear Edge

By |2026-05-12T09:38:33-10:00May 10, 2026|Categories: Wieninger, Malji, Edge|Tags: , , , , |

Strategic stability in the Indo-Pacific depends not on numerical parity or arms racing, but on reinforcing deterrence through survivable capability, disciplined communication, and credible commitment. Adapting the enduring logic of Cold War deterrence to a more complex nuclear landscape, the chapter argues that the United States can sustain extended deterrence for allies, reduce the risk of miscalculation, and preserve stability at the nuclear edge in an era of competitive multipolarity.

Holding the Line at Sea

By |2026-05-12T09:28:36-10:00May 10, 2026|Categories: Tekwani, Edge|Tags: , , , |

Maritime deterrence in the Indo-Pacific must move beyond episodic demonstrations of force toward a continuous, networked architecture of presence anchored in law, alliances, and forward posture. The chapter demonstrates how the United States and its partners can integrate naval power, coast guard legitimacy, island-chain geography, multilateral cooperation, and resilience across cyber and economic domains to deter coercion at sea without escalating the region toward crisis.

Deterring Gray-Zone Warfare

By |2026-05-12T09:22:28-10:00May 10, 2026|Categories: Mullins, Edge|Tags: , , , |

Gray-zone warfare has become a central feature of strategic competition in the Indo-Pacific, enabling adversaries to erode deterrence through coercive actions below the threshold of armed conflict. The chapter argues that restoring deterrence requires clear differentiation between actions that can be deterred and those that must be managed, combined with stronger whole-of-government coordination, allied integration, calibrated risk acceptance, targeted costs for perpetrators, and resilience that complements credible punishment and denial.

Architecture of Denial

By |2026-05-11T10:37:42-10:00May 10, 2026|Categories: Malji, Edge|Tags: , |

Deterrence in the Indo-Pacific must be deliberately constructed through an architecture of denial that integrates military power, alliance networks, force posture, and statecraft into a coherent system. Sustained advantage, the chapter argues, depends not on declaratory policy alone, but on the structured integration of conventional and nuclear forces, cyber and space resilience, distributed basing, resilient logistics, and coordinated diplomatic, economic, and technological power across domains and geography.

Deterrence Under Pressure in the Indo-Pacific

By |2026-05-10T17:01:41-10:00May 10, 2026|Categories: Malji, Edge|Tags: , |

Deterrence has emerged as the organizing principle of U.S. statecraft in a competitive multipolar Indo-Pacific, shaping how the United States prevents coercion, manages escalation, and sustains regional stability. Effective deterrence, the chapter argues, depends on the integration of credible capability, strategic communication, resilient partnerships, disciplined escalation management, and continuous adaptation across military and nonmilitary domains.

The Edge that Endures

By |2026-05-12T08:57:00-10:00May 10, 2026|Categories: Minnich, Edge|Tags: , |

America’s strategic edge has endured not through geography or abundance alone, but through outward engagement, industrial strength, and the integration of deterrence, lethality, and warrior ethos. In an era of competitive multipolarity, sustaining that edge will require strategic discipline, resilient alliances and industrial networks, acquisition agility, and the ability to adapt faster than adversaries in a contested Indo-Pacific.

Security Nexus Perspective: A Framework for Understanding Cognitive Security as Strategic Terrain

By |2026-03-03T17:14:06-10:00February 18, 2026|Categories: Canyon, Security Nexus, news|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

A new Security Nexus Perspective, “Framework for Understanding Cognitive Security as Strategic Terrain,”by Dr. Deon K. Canyon, associate dean of academics and professor at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, provides an in-depth look at how adversaries weaponize perception, trust, and decision-making to shape strategic outcomes in modern conflict. The article highlights the growing importance of cognitive security in the Indo-Pacific region, where artificial intelligence, synthetic media, and information operations are increasingly used to influence alliances and complicate crisis response. Explore this timely and thought-provoking analysis to gain a deeper understanding of the challenges and opportunities in navigating contested cognitive terrain.

Security Nexus Perspective: Flight into the Dark: South Asia’s Protest Republics

By |2025-12-09T13:03:42-10:00September 23, 2025|Categories: Tekwani, Security Nexus, news|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , |

A new Security Nexus Perspective by Shyam Tekwani investigates the recent wave of government collapses across South Asia and the security implications for the broader Indo-Pacific regiDrawing on his expertise in regional politics and conflict at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, Tekwani traces how citizen-led protests in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Nepal dismantled fragile regimes from within. The analysis emphasizes a central argument: lasting deterrence in the Indo-Pacific must be grounded in domestic stability, not solely in external alliances or military strength.

113 Fellows complete Comprehensive Security Cooperation Course at DKI APCSS

By |2025-12-18T05:32:19-10:00September 22, 2025|Categories: Courses, news|Tags: , , , , , , , |

As the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies marks its 30th anniversary, 113 Fellows from 37 locations around the globe graduated today from the Center’s Comprehensive Security Cooperation course (CSC 25-3), completing five weeks of study focused on building trust and strengthening security ties in the Indo-Pacific.

Dialogue | Episode 50: ROK-U.S. Alliance: The Near Future—A Dialogue with Dr. Clint Work

By |2025-12-09T13:03:28-10:00September 2, 2025|Categories: Dialogue Podcast, Podcast, news|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

Dr. Clint Work joins Dialogue Episode 50 to examine the future of the ROK-U.S. alliance, focusing on OPCON transfer, deterrence, and Seoul's role in regional security.

Go to Top