Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Center for International Security and Cooperation Stanford University


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July 18th, 2012

A look back at the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization

CISAC, FSI Stanford News

KEDO’s profile on the North Korean landscape was unmistakable, its impact on Pyongyang profound. Yet real knowledge and understanding about the organization in public and official circles in South Korea, Japan, and the United States was terribly thin at the beginning, and remains so to this day. As a result, the lessons learned from KEDO's decade-long experience working with the North Koreans have been largely misunderstood. Read more »



April 13th, 2012

With humiliating failure of North Korea's rocket launch, observers believe nuclear test is next

CISAC, FSI Stanford in the news

As North Korea celebrates 100th birthday anniversary of its revered founder Kim Il Sung amid the humiliating failure of its attempt to launch a satellite into orbit, CISAC experts believe a third underground nuclear test could be next in North's toolbox of provocation. Read more »



January 6th, 2012

North Korea watchers look at Pyongyang's nuclear trajectory

CISAC, FSI Stanford Op-ed: The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists on January 6, 2012

In the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Niko Milonopoulos, Siegfried Hecker and Robert Carlin use detailed overhead imagery to assess Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program -- and examine how Kim Jong-un's rise may influence it. In a separate piece, written before Kim Jong-il's death, Hecker and Carlin review the developments in North Korea in 2011.




December 8th, 2011

North Korea experts: Pyongyang is now courting Beijing, not the U.S.

CISAC, FSI Stanford Op-ed: Los Angeles Times on December 8, 2011

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Robert Carlin and John Lewis argue that normalizing ties with the U.S. is no longer North Korea's priority. Both researchers have visited North Korea several times, including the only American visit to the uranium enrichment facility at Yongbyon in November 2010. Read more »



March 1st, 2011

Robert Carlin: How to make progress with Pyongyang

In testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, CISAC's Robert Carlin says Washington still has much to learn about North Korea.





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News around the web

How Does North Korea Stay So Secretive?
Margaret Warner discusses the mysterious nation with former senior CIA and State Department intelligence analyst Robert Carlin, now at Stanford University. MARGARET WARNER: One key development that US intelligence apparently didn't see, ...
December 21, 2011 in PBS NewsHour

China Moves to Ensure Stability in North Korea
China, North Korea’s foremost ally, appears to be moving quickly to try to ensure stability in a crippled and isolated nation now facing a leadership transition fraught with dangers.
December 19, 2011 in New York Times

Presidents Obama, Lee Face 'Bad or Worse Options' Over N. Korea Negotiations
We asked Stanford University visiting scholar Robert Carlin, who spent decades at the State Department and the CIA, where things stand now.
October 14, 2011 in PBS NewsHour

What I Found In North Korea
SIEGFRIED S. HECKER is Co-Director of the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University. He was director of the Los Alamos ...
December 10, 2010 in Foreign Affairs

Stanford's Hecker provides window into North Korea's nuclear activity
Hecker was joined on the trip by visiting scholar Robert Carlin and emeritus professor John Lewis, both of CISAC. Though their guides at Yongbyon said the ...
December 1, 2010 in The Stanford Daily

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