To the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.
Remarks as delivered by James R. Clapper, Director of National Intelligence
A new weapon in the arsenal against climate change is tapping local knowledge to bridge the policy gap and let communities make their own informed decisions about how to manage livelihoods, natural resources, culture and heritage.
More than three dozen national security officials, members of Congress and military leaders are warning of the threat climate change poses to U.S. national security, the latest in an indicator that U.S.
It’s all about the water.
Climate change is a complex, crosscutting issue that poses risks to many environmental and economic systems—including agriculture, infrastructure, ecosystems, and human health—and presents a significant financial risk to the federal government.
The changing U.S. and international energy pictures have a profound effect on security, a senior Pentagon official said here yesterday.
One year ago, the United States government froze all property of the Central Bank of Iran and other Iranian financial institutions within the United States. The move was part of a broader effort to compel the Islamic Republic to give up its alleged nuclear weapons program.
For centuries, the glaciers of the Western Himalayas have fed the Indus River, which flows down the mountains through India and into Pakistan, where it runs the length of the country to the Arabian Sea.
2012 witnessed a remarkable number and extremity of environmental conditions, from Hurricane Sandy and the U.S. drought to wildfires in Siberia and drought-driven blackouts in India. Arctic sea ice melted to its furthest extent in recent history.
Remarks at Secretary Clinton's Foreign Affairs Policy Board Meeting
Worldwide Threat Assessment of the US Intelligence Community. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. Statement for the Record by James R. Clapper, Director of National Intelligence on March 12, 2013.
The Climate and Energy Nexus: Challenges and Opportunities for Transatlantic Security. Alexandria, London: CNA/RUSI.
Breaking the Link between Commodities and Climate Change. Washington, D.C.: Climate Advisers.
Water, U.S. Foreign Policy and American Leadership. Elliot School of International Affairs. Georg Washington University.