Plus, California's struggles to curb homelessness and the strategic landscape in the Middle East that Iran created.
What to expect from the Biden-Kishida summit U.S. President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida will meet in Washington this week to discuss the future of the longstanding U.S.-Japan partnership. The summit comes at a time of international conflict, heightened economic competition, and fraught politics. What announcements are expected from the meeting? How might Kishida approach his address to a joint session of Congress? And what’s at stake for his political longevity in Japan? Mireya Solís examines these questions in a preview of the summit. | A key point “Kishida has yet to articulate his own vision for Japan’s role in a fracturing world order and how the U.S.-Japan alliance will operate in this era of growing uncertainty. The address to the joint session of Congress offers an excellent opportunity to do so, should Kishida seize it.” — Mireya Solís |
More research and commentary Why is California behind in curbing homelessness? 5 of the top 10 major U.S. cities with the highest rates of homelessness nationally are in California. In an opinion piece for the Los Angeles Times, Tracy Hadden Loh and Hanna Love discuss California’s struggle to address homelessness and what the state can learn from other places. Iran’s order of chaos. “The post–October 7 strategic landscape in the Middle East is one that was largely created by Iran and that plays to its strengths,” argues Suzanne Maloney in an article for Foreign Affairs. |
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