Texas National Security Review
@TXNatSecReview
A rigorous, policy-relevant journal on national & international security, brought to you by @UTAustin in association with @StraussCenter and @ClementsCenter
Presenting our Summer 2025 roundup! A thread of all the articles from our latest issue. 🧵 tnsr.org/latest-print-i…
Excited to get print copies of the latest issue of @TXNatSecReview. You can find all our articles, podcast, etc, online - no paywall! - at tnsr.org :
Thank you to @ClementsCenter for inviting us to attend and contribute to such an incredible event!
Our final day of #SummerSeminar2025 featured conversations with @BelferCenter's Bob Zoellick and @StanfordCISAC's @JimGoldgeier, along with a discussion on academic publishing and public engagement led by @SAISHopkins's Frank Gavin and @TXNatSecReview's @RGVest.
Congratulations to our previous editor-in-chief!
William Inboden will serve as UT Austin’s next Executive Vice President and Provost. This marks a homecoming for the award-winning teacher and renowned national security and foreign policy scholar, who previously served in several academic leadership roles at the University and…
William Inboden will serve as UT Austin’s next Executive Vice President and Provost. This marks a homecoming for the award-winning teacher and renowned national security and foreign policy scholar, who previously served in several academic leadership roles at the University and…
The US Army’s creation of a US Cyber Command “reflects an attempt at cultural change within the military.” Read IGP Affiliated Faculty Members Erica Lonergan (@eborghard) and Jack Snyder’s piece published in @TXNatSecReview: tnsr.org/2025/07/cultur…
Should AI be involved in nuclear weapons decisions? 🤖 💣 In our latest podcast episode, @HerbLinCyber discusses his TNSR article and argues that the real questions aren't about AI taking over, but on where it can be responsibly and safely integrated. youtu.be/z4XRrKk5rp4
From the current issue of @TXNatSecReview: @nickdanderson and Press on war in Korea, @jcaverley on Chinese control of Taiwan, @richardmaass on legal deterrence, @eborghard and Snyder on military culture, and @HerbLinCyber on AI and nuclear weapons tnsr.org/latest-print-i…
In this Q&A, Jeffrey Friedman gives a preview of his article in our next issue. He addresses what might be making high-ranking national security officials overconfident in their assessments and offers a number of techniques that help to shatter these illusions of efficacy.
A new study shows that overconfidence about uncertainty is so extreme among US and NATO national security officials, it can cancel out what they already know. But, there's training that can help. Thomas Gaulkin interviewed Jeffrey Friedman to learn more. thebulletin.org/2025/07/interv…