Focusing on the economic dynamics of the rapidly changing Arctic, this report evaluates the benefits and costs associated with the region's increasing accessibility. It examines the potential economic opportunities presented by the rich resources of the American Arctic while also addressing the environmental and social implications of such exploration.
Heather A. Conley Boeken
Heather A. Conley is een erkend buitenlands beleidsanalist en Europe-expert. Haar werk richt zich op het Europese beleid en internationale betrekkingen, met diepgaande inzichten in de complexe dynamiek van de regio. Haar expertise, opgedaan in toonaangevende denktanks en overheidsinstellingen, stelt haar in staat om doordringende analyses te leveren. Conley wordt regelmatig gevraagd door grote mediakanalen voor haar commentaar op wereldzaken.


The New Foreign Policy Frontier
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Since World War II, the Arctic has been a region of geostrategic importance to the United States. As unprecedented environmental transformation occurs in the Arctic, this region will increase in significance. When historians look back at this critical opportunity to develop U.S. Arctic policy, we do not want the question to be posed, “Who lost the Arctic?” but rather, “How did the United States win the Arctic?” Crafting U.S. policy toward the Arctic, however, is a complex and challenging undertaking. Arctic policy must respond to the economic, environmental, security, and geopolitical concerns that confront the region. When the Barack Obama administration came into office in January 2009, it accepted and left unchanged the recently adopted Arctic strategy of the George W. Bush administration. In its second term, it is now time for the Obama administration to enhance U.S. Arctic policy by updating and prioritizing National Security Presidential Directive 66/Homeland Security Presidential Directive 25 (NSPD-66/HSPD-25), improving interagency cooperation, enhancing U.S. international and public diplomacy related to the Arctic, and increasing the focus of senior U.S. officials. These activities must begin now if the United States is to prepare for and fully maximize its chairmanship of the Arctic Council beginning in 2015.