Our Experts in the News: January 2024
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Responsible Statecraft - Are Houthi attacks doing that much damage to the world economy?
January 26, 2024
But do the Houthi attacks really pose a major threat to world trade, as the Biden administration claims? If so, is that a good enough reason to risk further escalation by bombing the Houthis when less risky options are still available?
Responsible Statecraft put these questions to Eugene Gholz, a political science professor at Notre Dame University and an expert on the relationship between economic policy and national security.
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Political Science
Newsweek
Ireland Turns on Joe Biden Over Israel
January 18, 2024
Michael Desch, a professor of international relations at the University of Notre Dame who specializes in international relations, told Newsweek: "Blood is generally thicker than water and President Biden has had a good relationship with the Emerald Isle over the years given his family ties to the Old Sod.
"But there are limits to how much Irish ancestry will make up for the gallons of innocent blood being shed in Gaza by Israel with the Biden administration's reluctant support.
"In general, global opinion is turning against Israel and the United States and it is not surprising that many in Ireland would share this critical view.
"We are well past the point where wearing a shamrock on St. Patrick's Day will endear the president with his ancestors' country given his unconditional support of Israel's overreaction to the tragic events of 10/7."
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Political Science
Cato Institute - The US Military Role in the Red Sea – Now Turning Offensive – Is a Bad Deal
January 12, 2024
By Eugene Gholz
The economic cost of using the US military to try to block or deter the Houthi attacks is way higher than the commercial interests’ cost of adapting on their own. Using the US military takes those costs away from the goods’ consumers, makes them larger, and puts them onto the back of the US taxpayer.
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Political Science