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Potomac Institute for Policy Studies

Coverage of Potomac Institute for Policy Studies in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Apr 16 · 07:00 UTCMost recent: May 26 · 07:00 UTC
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  • SECURITYMay 26 · 07:00 UTCWAR ON THE ROCKS
    Rebuilding American Manufacturing: A Keystone for Economic Statecraft

    The article discusses the importance of rebuilding American manufacturing as a critical component of economic statecraft, referencing China's 2010 rare-earth exports embargo against Japan to illustrate supply chain vulnerabilities. It is part of an 11-part series by the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies and War on the Rocks on integrating economic statecraft into U.S. national security strategy.

  • SECURITYApr 30 · 07:00 UTCWAR ON THE ROCKS
    Rethinking Corporate Risk and Alignment in an Era of Economic Statecraft

    This article is part of an 11-part series examining U.S. economic statecraft integration into national security strategy. It uses a 2010 incident where China halted rare earth mineral exports to Japan following a maritime collision as a case study in how economic measures can be wielded as geopolitical tools affecting global supply chains.

  • SECURITYApr 23 · 07:00 UTCWAR ON THE ROCKS
    Seeing the Cyber in Economic Statecraft

    Americans lost nearly $21 billion to cybercrime in 2025, marking a record for cyber-enabled economic losses. Private sector losses from malicious cyber activity regularly exceed $200 billion annually, with both criminal groups and state-sponsored hackers increasingly targeting U.S. economic interests. The article examines how cybersecurity relates to broader economic statecraft and national security strategy.

  • SECURITYApr 16 · 07:00 UTCWAR ON THE ROCKS
    Operationalizing Economic Statecraft: A New Imperative for the Pentagon

    This article examines how the United States should integrate economic statecraft into national security strategy and military planning. The piece argues that future conflicts may be decided by supply chain control and economic tools like export controls and sanctions before military engagement occurs. It is part of an 11-part series by the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies and War on the Rocks.