COVID-19: Potential Implications for 
May 28, 2020 
International Security Environment—Overview  Ronald O'Rourke 
of Issues and Further Reading for Congress 
Specialist in Naval Affairs 
  
Some observers argue the COVID-19 pandemic could be a world-changing event with potentially 
Kathleen J. McInnis 
profound and long-lasting implications for the international security environment and the U.S. 
Specialist in International 
role in the world. Other observers are more skeptical that the COVID-19 pandemic will have 
Security 
such effects. 
  
Observers who argue the COVID-19 pandemic could be world-changing for the international 
Michael Moodie 
Assistant Director and 
security environment and the U.S. role in the world have focused on several areas of potential 
Senior Specialist in Foreign 
change, including the following, which are listed here separately but overlap in some cases and 
Affairs, Defense and Trade 
can interact with one another: 
  
  world order, international institutions, and global governance; 
 
  U.S. global leadership and the U.S. role in the world; 
  China’s potential role as a global leader; 
  U.S. relations and great power competition with China and Russia, including the use of the COVID-19 
pandemic as a theme or tool for conducting ideological competition; 
  the relative prevalence of democratic and authoritarian or autocratic forms of government; 
  societal tension, reform, transformation, and governmental stability in various countries; 
  the world economy, globalization, and U.S. trade policy; 
  the characteristics and conduct of conflict; 
  allied defense budgets and U.S. alliances; 
  the cohesion of the European Union; 
  the definition of, and budgeting for, U.S. national security; 
  U.S. defense strategy, defense budgets, and military operations ; 
  U.S. foreign assistance programs and international debt relief; 
  activities of non-state actors; 
  the amount of U.S. attention devoted to ongoing international issues other than the COVID-19 pandemic; 
and 
  the role of Congress in setting and overseeing the execution of U.S. foreign and defense policy. 
Issues for Congress may include whether and how the COVID-19 pandemic could change the international security 
environment, whether the Trump Administration’s actions for responding to such change are appropriate and sufficient, and 
what implications such change could have for the role of Congress in setting and overseeing the execution of U.S. foreign 
and defense policy. 
Congress’s decisions regarding these issues could have significant and even profound implications for U.S. foreign and 
defense policy, and for the status of Congress as a co-equal branch relative to the executive branch in setting and overseeing 
the implementation of U.S. foreign and defense policy. 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
Overview of Potential Implications ................................................................................................. 1 
World Order, International Institutions, and Global Governance.............................................. 1 
U.S. Global Leadership and Role in the World ......................................................................... 2 
China’s Potential Role as a Global Leader ................................................................................ 2 
U.S. Relations and Great Power Competition with China and Russia ...................................... 2 
Democracy, Authoritarianism, and Autocracy .......................................................................... 3 
Societal Tension, Reform, and Transformation, and Governmental Stability ........................... 3 
World Economy, Globalization, and U.S. Trade Policy ............................................................ 3 
Allied Defense Spending and U.S. Alliances ............................................................................ 4 
European Union ........................................................................................................................ 4 
Definition of, and Budgeting for, U.S. National Security ......................................................... 4 
U.S. Defense Strategy, Defense Budget, and Military Operations ............................................ 4 
U.S. Foreign Assistance and International Debt Relief ............................................................. 5 
Non-state Actors ........................................................................................................................ 5 
U.S. Attention to International Issues Other than COVID-19 ................................................... 5 
Role of Congress ....................................................................................................................... 5 
Further Reading ......................................................................................................................... 5 
Potential Issues for Congress........................................................................................................... 5 
Samuel Brannen and Kathleen H. Hicks, “World Order after Covid-19,” Center for 
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), May 28, 2020. ....................................................... 10 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix A. Related CRS Reports ................................................................................................. 7 
Appendix B. Additional Writings .................................................................................................... 9 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 37 
 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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Introduction 
Some observers argue the COVID-19 pandemic could be a world-changing event with potentially 
profound and long-lasting implications for the international security environment and the U.S. 
role in the world. Other observers are more skeptical that the COVID-19 pandemic will have such 
effects. This report provides a brief overview of some potential implications the COVID-19 
pandemic might have for the international security environment and the U.S. role in the world, 
and a bibliography of CRS reports and other writings for further reading. 
Issues for Congress may include whether and how the COVID-19 pandemic could change the 
international security environment, whether the Trump Administration’s actions for responding to 
such change are appropriate and sufficient, and what implications such change could have for the 
role of Congress in setting and overseeing the execution of U.S. foreign and defense policy. 
Congress’s decisions regarding these issues could have significant and even profound 
implications for U.S. foreign and defense policy, and for the status of Congress as a co-equal 
branch relative to the executive branch in setting and overseeing the implementation of U.S. 
foreign and defense policy. 
Appendix A presents a list of CRS reports that provide more in-depth discussions of issues 
presented in this report. Appendix B presents a list of additional writings reflecting various 
perspectives on these issues. A separate CRS report discusses the question of whether the U.S. 
role in the world is changing as a result of factors other than the COVID-19 pandemic.1 
Overview of Potential Implications 
Areas of potential change reflected in writings from observers who view the COVID-19 
pandemic as a potentially world-changing event include but are not limited to those discussed 
below. Although these areas of potential change are presented separately, they overlap in some 
cases and can interact with one another. 
World Order, International Institutions, and Global Governance 
Some observers have focused on the possibility that the COVID-19 pandemic could cause or 
accelerate a decline or erosion in the U.S.-led liberal international order that has operated since 
World War II, in the international institutions and norms that contribute to it, and consequently in 
global governance.2 A decline or erosion in the U.S.-led liberal order or the international 
                                                 
1 CRS Report R44891, U.S. Role in the World: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and Michael 
Moodie. 
2 For more on the U.S.-led liberal international order and the concept of world order generally, see CRS Report 
R44891, U.S. Role in the World: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and Michael Moodie. As 
discussed in that report, the term international order or world order generally refers in foreign policy discussions to the 
collection of organizations, institutions, treaties, rules, norms, and practices that are intended to organize, structure, and 
regulate international relations during a given historical period. 
Other terms used to refer to the U.S.-led liberal international order include postwar international order, rules-based 
international order, and open international order. Observers sometimes substitute world for international, or omit 
international or world and refer simply to the liberal order, the U.S.-led order, and so on. In the terms liberal 
international order and liberal order, the word liberal does not refer to the conservative-liberal construct often used in 
discussing contemporary politics in the United States or other countries. It is, instead, an older use of the term that 
refers to an order based on the rule of law, as opposed to an order based on the arbitrary powers of hereditary 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
institutions form part of it could set the stage for its replacement by a new or modified world 
order reflecting changed rules, norms, and practices, or by a more disorderly world. 
U.S. Global Leadership and Role in the World 
Some observers have focused on how, in their view, the COVID-19 pandemic is demonstrating 
that the United States is maintaining or reasserting its role as global leader, while other observers 
suggest that, in their view, the COVID-19 pandemic is demonstrating that the United States has 
chosen to withdraw from or is no longer capable of performing that role. The COVID-19 
pandemic could influence discussions over the costs and benefits to the United States of acting as 
a global leader, not only with respect to global health but across a range of issues. Related to this, 
some observers have focused on how the COVID-19 pandemic may be illustrating the strengths 
or weaknesses of the Trump Administration’s “America First” approach to the U.S. role in the 
world, or the merits of the U.S. system of government and economic model as potential examples 
for other countries to emulate. 
China’s Potential Role as a Global Leader 
Some observers have focused on how the COVID-19 pandemic may be providing insight into 
whether China desires and is working to become a global leader on par with (or in the place of) 
the United States, whether China has a capacity for doing so, and how other countries might view 
China acting in such a role. China’s transparency, particularly regarding its actions in the early 
days of its COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan, as well as China’s so-called donation diplomacy or 
mask diplomacy—meaning China’s actions to send medical supplies and personnel to other 
countries, and the highlighting of these actions in statements from China’s government and state-
controlled media—have become new elements of an ongoing discussion regarding China’s 
capacity or suitability for acting as a global leader. This ongoing discussion includes 
consideration of a range of other issues, including China’s actions for implementing its Belt and 
Road Initiative, China’s territorial disputes with other countries, its participation in international 
organizations, and its technology-development and international lending activities. 
U.S. Relations and Great Power Competition with China 
and Russia 
Some observers have focused on how the COVID-19 pandemic has become a significant element 
in U.S-China relations, and in U.S. great power competition with China and Russia, which the 
Trump Administration has placed at the center of its national security construct. For some 
observers, the COVID-19 pandemic presents an opportunity for U.S.-China cooperation on an 
important international issue of common interest. For other observers, the COVID-19 pandemic is 
a major new source of dispute and arena of competition between the two countries, and is causing 
U.S.-China relations to harden more fully into a Cold War-like adversarial situation. Some 
observers have focused on how the COVID-19 pandemic provides a prominent new factor in the 
discussion of whether the United States should decouple its economy from China’s and reduce its 
                                                 
monarchs.  
Though often referred to as if it is a fully developed or universally established situation, the liberal international order, 
like other international orders that preceded it, is incomplete in geographic reach and in other ways; partly aspirational; 
not fixed in stone, but rather subject to evolution over time; sometimes violated by its supporters; not entirely free of 
might-makes-right behavior; resisted or rejected by certain states and non-state actors; and subject to various stresses 
and challenges. 
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dependence on China for key materials and products, including hospital supplies and 
pharmaceuticals. Some observers have focused on whether the U.S. and Chinse responses to the 
COVID-19 pandemic will affect views around the world regarding the relative merits of the U.S. 
and Chinese forms of government and economic models as potential examples to emulate. 
Democracy, Authoritarianism, and Autocracy 
Related to the point above about forms of government, some observers have focused on how the 
COVID-19 pandemic appears to be challenging democratic systems in various countries and 
providing national leaders with an opportunity or rationale for taking actions to seize greater 
power and move their countries away from democracy and toward authoritarianism or autocracy, 
or strengthen or consolidate their already-existing authoritarian or autocratic forms of 
government.3 As discussed in another CRS report, a key element of the traditional U.S. role in the 
world since World War II has been to defend and promote freedom, democracy, and human rights 
as universal values, while criticizing and resisting authoritarian and illiberal forms of government 
where and when possible.4 
Societal Tension, Reform, and Transformation, and 
Governmental Stability 
Beyond the specific point above about potential movement toward greater authoritarianism and 
autocracy, some observers have focused on the possibility that the COVID-19 pandemic more 
generally could cause increased social tensions in certain countries, could lead to (or present 
opportunities for) societal reforms and transformations, and could destabilize and perhaps cause 
the downfall of governments, akin to the effects of certain past world-changing events, such as 
World War I.5 Such changes could alter the political orientations, national strategies, foreign 
policies, and defense policies of the countries in which they occur, potentially inducing follow-on 
effects among governments and other global actors that interact with those countries. 
World Economy, Globalization, and U.S. Trade Policy 
Some observers have focused on the possibility that the COVID-19 pandemic could lead to 
significant and potentially long-lasting changes to the world economy that in turn could reshape 
the international security environment. Among other things, observers have focused on the 
possibility that the COVID-19 situation could be leading the world economy into a significant 
                                                 
3 For additional discussion of the issue of the prevalence of democracy and authoritarian or autocratic forms of 
government around the world, see CRS Report R45344, Global Trends in Democracy: Background, U.S. Policy, and 
Issues for Congress, by Michael A. Weber. 
4 See CRS Report R44891, U.S. Role in the World: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and 
Michael Moodie. 
5 For brief discussions of the impacts of World War I on societies and governments, see, for example, Robert Wilde, 
“The Consequences of World War I, Political and Social Effects of the War to End All Wars,” ThoughtCo., July 10, 
2019; John Horne, “The First World War: the Aftermath, The Years Following the End of the War Were Marked by 
More Wars, Political Upheaval and Deep Social Change,” Irish Times, April 24, 2018; Steven Mintz, “Historical 
Context: The Global Effect of World War I,” History Now (Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History), undated, 
accessed April 16, 2020; Margaret MacMillan, “World War I: The War That Changed Everything,” Wall Street 
Journal, June 20, 2014; Steven Erlanger, “The War to End All Wars? Hardly. But It Did Change Them Forever.” New 
York Times, June 26, 2014; Jay Winter, “How the Great War Shaped the World,” Atlantic, World War I issue 
(September 29, 2014); Kathleen Haley, “100 Years after WWI: The Lasting Impacts of the Great War,” Media, Law & 
Policy (Syracuse University), July 28, 2014; “Aftermath of World War I,” Wikipedia, updated April 11, 2020, accessed 
April 16, 2020. 
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recession—an effect that could contribute to the societal tensions mentioned in the previous point. 
Noting that the COVID-19 pandemic has reduced world trade volumes and disrupted global 
supply chains, they have focused on the question of whether economic globalization will as a 
result be slowed, halted, or reversed. Observers are monitoring how such effects could influence 
or be influenced by U.S. trade policy. 
Allied Defense Spending and U.S. Alliances 
The so-called burden-sharing issue—that is, the question of whether U.S. allies are shouldering a 
sufficient share of the collective allied defense burden—has long been a point of contention 
between the United States and its allies around the globe, and it has been a matter of particular 
emphasis for the Trump Administration. Some observers have focused on the possibility that the 
costs that U.S. allies are incurring to support their economies during stay-at-home/lockdown 
periods will lead to offsetting reductions in their defense expenditures. Some observers argue that 
the NATO allies in Europe in particular may experience contractions in their defense budgets for 
this reason. More generally, some observers argue that if the COVID-19 pandemic causes a 
global recession, allied defense budgets could be further reduced—a potential impact that could 
affect not only NATO allies in Europe, but those in Asia as well. 
European Union 
Some observers have additionally focused on the question of whether the COVID-19 pandemic is 
creating tensions among the European Union member states, particularly in connection with 
actions they are taking to close their national borders, and what impact the COVID-19 pandemic 
might ultimately have on the cohesion of the European Union. 
Definition of, and Budgeting for, U.S. National Security 
Some observers have focused on the question of whether the COVID-19 situation will (or should) 
lead to a revised definition of U.S. national security, particularly one that is less military-centric 
and more focused on what are sometimes called human-security-oriented challenges or global 
issues, such as climate change, that are currently more at the periphery of U.S. national security 
policy and plans. Such a change in definition could lead to a changed allocation of funding 
between the Department of Defense (DOD) and other government agencies that perform national-
security-related tasks, a realignment of resources within DOD between combat-oriented programs 
and other programs (such as those related to DOD’s mission of providing defense support of civil 
authorities), and perhaps a changed allocation of funding among the agencies other than DOD 
that perform national-security-related tasks. 
U.S. Defense Strategy, Defense Budget, and Military Operations 
Some observers have focused on the question of whether the large federal expenditures being 
made in response to the domestic U.S. economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the 
impact these expenditures will have on the federal budget deficit and federal debt, could lead to 
greater constraints in coming years on U.S. defense spending levels. As a follow-on matter, these 
observers are additionally focusing on the question of whether responding to such increased 
constraints will (or should) lead to revisions in U.S. defense strategy, changes in U.S. defense 
programs, and a reduction or termination of certain overseas U.S. military operations. 
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U.S. Foreign Assistance and International Debt Relief 
Some observers have focused on the question of whether the COVID-19 pandemic is providing a 
new lens through which to measure the value of U.S. foreign assistance and international debt 
relief in promoting U.S. interests, particularly in connection with the previously mentioned issue 
of whether to revise the definition of U.S. national security to make it less military-centric. 
Non-state Actors 
Some observers have focused on how non-state actors such as international terrorist and criminal 
organizations are reacting to the COVID-19 pandemic, and on how much priority should be given 
to countering such actors in the future, particularly in a context of a changed definition of U.S. 
national security. 
U.S. Attention to International Issues Other than COVID-19 
Some observers have focused on whether responding to the COVID-19 pandemic is affecting the 
time and resources that U.S. leaders and agencies can devote to addressing other international 
issues of concern to the United States that predate but continue to exist in parallel with the 
COVID-19 pandemic. Administration officials have warned other countries to not take actions 
during the COVID-19 pandemic to challenge U.S. interests around the world or otherwise test 
U.S. resolve or responsiveness on the thinking that the COVID-19 pandemic is distracting U.S. 
officials from other concerns or reducing U.S. capacity for responding to any such challenges. 
Role of Congress 
At least one observer has focused on the issue of how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the 
ability of Congress to conduct oversight of the Administration’s foreign policy actions. 
Further Reading 
For further reading on the issues outlined above, see the CRS reports presented in Appendix A 
and the additional writings presented in Appendix B. 
Potential Issues for Congress 
Potential issues for Congress regarding implications of the COVID-19 pandemic for the 
international security environment and the U.S. role in the world include but are not limited to the 
following: 
  Will the COVID-19 pandemic change the international security environment, and 
if so, in what ways? How clearly can potential changes be anticipated?  
  How should the United States respond to potential changes in the international 
security environment arising from the COVID-19 pandemic and its effects, 
particularly in light of uncertainty regarding the precise nature and likelihood of 
these changes? How might U.S. action or inaction influence or accelerate these 
changes?  
  What actions is the Administration developing to respond to potential changes in 
the international security environment arising from the COVID-19 pandemic? 
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Does Congress have sufficient visibility into these actions? Are these actions 
appropriate and sufficient? What metrics should Congress use to assess them? 
  What implications do potential changes in the international security environment 
arising from the COVID-19 pandemic have for the role of Congress in setting 
and overseeing the execution of U.S. foreign and defense policy? Is Congress 
appropriately organized for maintaining Congress as a co-equal branch of 
government relative to the executive branch in addressing these potential 
changes? If the COVID-19 pandemic becomes a world-changing event for the 
international security environment and the U.S. role in the world, what 
implications, if any, might that have for congressional organization and 
operations? 
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Appendix A. Related CRS Reports 
CRS reports that provide more in-depth discussions of specific issues discussed in this report 
include the following, which are presented in alphabetical order of their titles:6 
  CRS Insight IN11198, Bolivia Postpones May Elections Amidst COVID-19 
Outbreak, by Clare Ribando Seelke. 
  CRS Report R46209, Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Pandemic: CRS 
Experts, by Matthew B. Barry. (Includes a section listing CRS experts on 
international response activities relating to the COVD-19 pandemic.) 
  CRS Report R46354, COVID-19 and China: A Chronology of Events (December 
2019-January 2020), by Susan V. Lawrence. 
  CRS In Focus IF11496, COVID-19 and Foreign Assistance: Issues for Congress, 
by Nick M. Brown, Marian L. Lawson, and Emily M. Morgenstern. 
  CRS Insight IN11288, COVID-19 and the Defense Industrial Base: DOD 
Response and Legislative Considerations, by Heidi M. Peters. 
  CRS Insight IN11279, COVID-19 and U.S. Iran Policy, by Kenneth Katzman. 
  CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10424, COVID-19: An Overview of Trade-Related 
Measures to Address Access to Medical Goods, by Nina M. Hart. 
  CRS Report R46304, COVID-19: China Medical Supply Chains and Broader 
Trade Issues, coordinated by Karen M. Sutter. 
  CRS Insight IN11387, COVID-19: Defense Production Act (DPA) Developments 
and Issues for Congress, by Michael H. Cecire and Heidi M. Peters. 
  CRS Insight IN11305, COVID-19: Defense Support of Civil Authorities, by 
Lawrence Kapp and Alan Ott. 
  CRS In Focus IF11421, COVID-19: Global Implications and Responses, by Sara 
M. Tharakan et al.  
  CRS Insight IN11280, COVID-19: Industrial Mobilization and Defense 
Production Act (DPA) Implementation, by Michael H. Cecire and Heidi M. 
Peters. 
  CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10436, COVID-19: International Trade and Access to 
Pharmaceutical Products, by Nina M. Hart. 
  CRS In Focus IF11525, COVID-19: National Security and Defense Strategy, by 
Kathleen J. McInnis. 
  CRS Report R46342, COVID-19: Role of the International Financial 
Institutions, by Rebecca M. Nelson and Martin A. Weiss. 
  CRS Insight IN11273, COVID-19: The Basics of Domestic Defense Response, 
coordinated by Michael J. Vassalotti. 
  CRS In Focus IF11434, COVID-19: U.S.-China Economic Considerations, by 
Karen M. Sutter and Michael D. Sutherland. 
  CRS In Focus IF11551, Export Restrictions in Response to the COVID-19 
Pandemic, by Christopher A. Casey and Cathleen D. Cimino-Isaacs. 
                                                 
6 Additional CRS reports that do not include COVID-19 in their titles and are not listed here may include discussions of 
the international implications of the COVID-19 pandemic. 
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  CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10467, Foreign Sovereign Immunity and COVID-19 
Lawsuits Against China, by Jennifer K. Elsea. 
  CRS In Focus IF11548, Helping U.S. Citizens Abroad During the COVID-19 
Pandemic and Other International Crises: Role of the Department of State, by 
Cory R. Gill. 
  CRS Report R46270, Global Economic Effects of COVID-19, coordinated by 
James K. Jackson. 
  CRS In Focus IF11537, Intelligence Community Support to Pandemic 
Preparedness and Response, by Michael E. DeVine. 
  CRS Report R46319, Novel Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19): Q&A on Global 
Implications and Responses, coordinated by Tiaji Salaam-Blyther. 
  CRS In Focus IF11532, Novel Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19): Impact in 
Africa, coordinated by Alexis Arieff. 
  CRS In Focus IF11480, Overview: The Department of Defense and COVID-19, 
coordinated by Kathleen J. McInnis. 
  CRS Insight IN11365, President Trump Criticizes VOA Coverage of China’s 
COVID-19 Response, by Thomas Lum and Matthew C. Weed. 
  CRS Insight IN11231, The Defense Production Act (DPA) and COVID-19: Key 
Authorities and Policy Considerations, by Michael H. Cecire and Heidi M. 
Peters. 
  CRS Insight IN11337, The Defense Production Act (DPA) and the COVID-19 
Pandemic: Recent Developments and Policy Considerations, by Michael H. 
Cecire and Heidi M. Peters. 
  CRS Insight IN11369, U.S. Funding to the World Health Organization (WHO), 
by Luisa Blanchfield and Tiaji Salaam-Blyther. 
  CRS Insight IN11325, U.S. Travel and Tourism and COVID-19, by Michaela D. 
Platzer. 
  CRS In Focus IF11494, Wildlife Trade, COVID-19, and Other Zoonotic 
Diseases, by Pervaze A. Sheikh and Katarina C. O'Regan. 
  CRS In Focus IF11513, WTO: Ministerial Delay, COVID-19, and Ongoing 
Issues, by Cathleen D. Cimino-Isaacs, Rachel F. Fefer, and Ian F. Fergusson. 
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Appendix B. Additional Writings 
In presenting sources of additional reading, this appendix includes some examples of writings 
reflecting various perspectives on the potential implications of the COVID-19 pandemic on the 
international security environment and the U.S. role in the world, organized by specific themes or 
topics. Within each section, the items are presented in chronological order, with the most recent 
on top. 
General/Multitopic 
Stephen M. Walt, “The Pandemic’s 5 Silver Linings, The Coronavirus Has Exacted a Terrible 
Toll—But Some Good Things May Come of It Yet,” Foreign Policy, May 26, 2020. 
Tom McTague, “The Pandemic’s Geopolitical Aftershocks Are Coming, Western Capitals Aren’t 
Just Worried About the Risk of a Resurgence in Coronavirus Cases,” Atlantic, May 18, 2020. 
Stephen M. Walt, “Will a Global Depression Trigger Another World War? The Coronavirus 
Pandemic Has Already Devastated the International Economy. Its Military Fallout Remains to Be 
Seen,” Foreign Policy, May 13, 2020. 
Phillip Y. Lipscy, “It’s Too Soon to Call Coronavirus Winners and Losers, Given how much 
remains unknown about the virus, talk of success may be premature,” Foreign Policy, May 12, 
2020. 
Alan Nicol, “The Pandemic Is Laying Bare a Global Water Crisis, Insufficient Water for Washing 
Is Likely to Worsen the Coronavirus in the Poorest Nations. There’s a Better Way Forward,” 
Foreign Policy, May 12, 2020. 
George H. Nash, “The Coronavirus Pandemic of 2020 in Historical Perspective,” National 
Review, May 11, 2020. 
Edith M. Lederer, “UN Chief Says Pandemic Is Unleashing a ‘Tsunami of Hate,’” Associated 
Press, May 8, 2020. 
Nikolas K. Gvosdev, “Why the Coronavirus Won't Transform International Affairs Like 9/11 
Did,” National Interest, May 5, 2020. 
Deepanshu Mohan, “The Geopolitical Contours of a Post-COVID-19 World,” East Asia Forum, 
May 2, 2020. 
Andrew Ehrhardt, “Disease and Diplomacy in the 19th Century,” War on the Rocks, April 30, 
2019. 
Resilience in the Face of the Coronavirus Pandemic, World Politics Review report, May 2020, 47 
pp. (Includes essays by various authors with the titles “Planning for the World After the 
Coronavirus Pandemic,” “What It Will Take to Save Economies From the Coronavirus 
Pandemic,” “Building Trust, Confidence and Collective Action in the Age of COVID-19,” “Why 
Tackling Corruption Is Crucial to the Global Coronavirus Response,” and “The Geography of 
COVID-19 and a Vulnerable Global Food System.”) 
Iain King, “How Covid-19 Will Change Us: Seven Lessons from the Most Consequential 
Pandemics in History,” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), April 29, 2020. 
Dmitri K. Simes, “The Perfect Storm,” National Interest, April 24, 2020. 
Fred Kaplan, “What Happens if Oil Doesn’t Recover? If Demand Doesn’t Pick Up This Summer, 
We Could See Major Shifts in Global Power,” Slate, April 23, 2020. 
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Barry R. Posen, “Do Pandemics Promote Peace? Why Sickness Slows the March to War,” 
Foreign Affairs, April 23, 2020. 
Joseph Cirincione, “How to Prevent War During the Coronavirus Pandemic, How Will the 
Coronavirus Threaten Global Peace?” National Interest, April 22, 2020. 
Frank Hoffman, “An American Perspective on Post-Pandemic Geopolitics,” RUSI, April 20, 
2020. 
Gordon Bardos, “Will the Coronavirus Crisis Force America to Look in the Mirror and Reform?” 
National Interest, April 18, 2020. 
Nicholas Eberstadt, “The “New Normal”: Thoughts about the Shape of Things to Come in the 
Post-Pandemic World,” National Bureau of Asian Research, April 18, 2020. 
Steve Coll, “Woodrow Wilson’s Case of the Flu, and How Pandemics Change History,” New 
Yorker, April 17, 2020. 
Ravi Kant, “Coronavirus: An Ice-Nine Moment for the World,” Asia Times, April 15, 2020. 
Jackson Diehl, “The Pandemic Is Killing Truth, Too,” Washington Post, April 12, 2020. 
Edith M. Lederer, “UN Chief Warns COVID-19 Threatens Global Peace and Security,” 
Associated Press, April 10, 2020. 
Richard Haass, “The Pandemic Will Accelerate History Rather Than Reshape It, Not Every Crisis 
Is a Turning Point, Foreign Affairs, April 7, 2020. 
Stratfor Worldview, “How the Coronavirus Pandemic Is Changing the World—and the Future,” 
National Interest, April 4, 2020. 
Daniel W. Drezner, “The Most Counterintuitive Prediction about World Politics and the 
Coronavirus, What If Nothing Changes?” Washington Post, March 30, 2020. 
Ali Demirdas, “Western Values May Not Survive the Coronavirus. European Unity and American 
Military Power Just Haven’t Held Up,” National Interest, March 28, 2020. 
John Allen et al., “How the World Will Look after the Coronavirus Pandemic,” Foreign Policy, 
March 20, 2020. (Includes short contributions from 12 authors.) 
Maxine Whittaker, “How Infectious Diseases Have Shaped Our Culture, Habits and Language,” 
The Conversation, July 12, 2017. 
World Order, International Institutions, and Global Governance 
Samuel Brannen and Kathleen H. Hicks, “World Order after Covid-19,” Center for Strategic and 
International Studies (CSIS), May 28, 2020. 
G. John Ikenberry and Charles A. Kupchan, “Global Distancing, Past Crises Spurred International 
Cooperation. Now Each Country Is Going It Alone,” Washington Post, May 21, 2020. 
Edward Lucas, “Pandemic Scorecard, Covid-19 Is Breaking and Shaping Reputations,” Center 
for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), May 18, 2020. 
Nick Wadhams, “Pandemic Shatters World Order, Sowing Anger and Mistrust in Its Wake,” 
Bloomberg, May 17, 2020. 
Thomas R. Pickering and Atman M. Trivedi, “The International Order Didn’t Fail the Pandemic 
Alone, The United States and China Are Its Crucial Pillars,” Foreign Affairs, May 14, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Damien Cave and Isabella Kwai, “China Is Defensive. The U.S. Is Absent. Can the Rest of the 
World Fill the Void?” New York Times, May 11, 2020. 
Edward Fishman, “The World Order Is Dead. Here’s How to Build a New One for a Post-
Coronavirus Era,” Politico, May 3, 2020. 
Rebecca Wolfe and Hilary Matfess Sunday, “COVID and Cooperation: The Latest Canary in the 
Coal Mine,” Lawfare, May 3, 2020. 
Joshua Keating, “The Decline of the Nation-State, Trump’s War with the Governors Hints at a 
New Political Order,” Foreign Policy, April 29, 2020. 
Yukon Huang and Jeremy Smith, “Pandemic Response Reflects Unlearned Lessons of U.S.-China 
Trade War,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, April 27, 2020. 
Mihir Sharma, “Diplomacy Is Another Victim of the Virus,” Bloomberg, April 26, 2020. 
Brahma Chellaney, “The WHO Has Failed the World in its Pandemic Response,” Strategist 
(Australian Strategic Policy Institute), April 23, 2020. 
William C. Danvers, “The World Bank steps up its role in fighting for the future,” The Hill, April 
22, 2020. 
Eric A. Posner, “The Limits of the World Health Organization,” Lawfare, April 21, 2020. 
Amitav Acharya, “How Coronavirus May Reshape the World Order,” National Interest, April 18, 
2020. 
Joseph S. Nye Jr., “No, the Coronavirus Will Not Change the Global Order,” Foreign Policy, 
April 16, 2020. 
Karen DeYoung and Liz Sly, “Global Institutions Are Flailing in the Face of the Pandemic,” 
Washington Post, April 15, 2020. 
Colin H. Kahl and Ariana Berengaut, “Aftershocks: The Coronavirus Pandemic and the New 
World Disorder,” War on the Rocks, April 10, 2020. 
Lanhee J. Chen, “Lost in Beijing: The Story of the WHO, China Broke the World Health 
Organization. The U.S. Has to Fix It or Leave and Start Its Own Group,” Wall Street Journal, 
April 8, 2020. 
Colum Lynch, “Can the United Nations Survive the Coronavirus? In the Absence of U.S. 
Leadership, the U.N. Is Struggling to Carve Out a Role in the Face of What May Be the Greatest 
Threat Since Its Founding,” Foreign Policy, April 8, 2020. 
Timofey V. Bordachev, “Visions Of The Post-Coronavirus World: Russian Expert On Europe 
Bordachev: The Liberal World Order Will Not Survive,” MEMRI, April 6, 2020. 
Matthew Lee and Edith M. Lederer, “Global Diplomacy Under the Gun in The Time of 
Ccoronavirus,” Associated Press, April 4, 2020. 
Thomas Wright, “Stretching the International Order to Its Breaking Point, The Greatest Error 
That Geopolitical Analysts Can Make May Be Believing That the Crisis Will Be Over in Three to 
Four Months,” Atlantic, April 4, 2020. 
Henry A. Kissinger, “The Coronavirus Pandemic Will Forever Alter the World Order,” Wall Street 
Journal, April 3, 2020. 
Ryan Broderick, “After The Coronavirus Passes, Your World Will Not Go Back To Normal, 
Before the Pandemic Began, the Systems That Govern Our World Were Brittle. Today, They Are 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Broken. When We Emerge, the World Will Be Different, and So Will We,” Buzzfeed News, April 
2, 2020. 
Rick Gladstone, “U.N. Security Council ‘Missing In Action’ in Coronavirus Fight,” New York 
Times, April 2, 2020. 
Ian Goldin and Robert Muggah, “End of International Cooperation? How Coronavirus Has 
Changed the World Permanently,” National Interest, March 31, 2020. 
U.S. Global Leadership and Role in World7 
Grace Melton, “The U.N. Is Using COVID-19 to Push Abortion. The U.S. Is Rightly Pushing 
Back,” Heritage Foundation, May 26, 2020. 
James Jay Carafano, “U.S. Demands on WHO Have Made a Critical Difference,” Heritage 
Foundation, May 22, 2020. 
Brett D. Schaefer, “WHO Is a Mess, but America Can’t Reform It Alone,” Heritage Foundation, 
May 21, 2020. 
Elizabeth Shackelford, “The Price of American Arrogance, It’s Not Just Trump. We Need to 
Overhaul Our Approach to Foreign Policy to Avoid Another Disaster Like the Coronavirus,” 
Slate, May 22, 2020. 
J. Stephen Morrison, “The Trump Administration’s Ignominious Exit at the 2020 World Health 
Assembly,” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), May 20, 2020. 
Lara Jakes, “U.S. Leads the World’s Virus Fight? That’s News to the World,” New York Times, 
May 8, 2020. 
Jose W. Fernandez, “In the Coronavirus Era, Trump’s ‘America First’ Means ‘Latin America 
Alone,’” Foreign Policy, May 7, 2020. 
Drew Hinshaw and Lukas I. Alpert, “U.S. Makes Diplomatic Push for Taiwan to Attend WHO 
Summit,” Wall Street Journal, May 7, 2020. 
Fred Kaplan, “Trump’s Medical Nationalism Will Make It Harder to Defeat COVID-19,” Slate, 
May 7, 2020. 
William Booth, Carolyn Y. Johnson, and Carol Morello, “The World Came Together for a Virtual 
Vaccine Summit. The U.S. Was Conspicuously Absent,” Washington Post, May 4, 2020. 
Matthew Petti, “Trump Administration Defends No-Show At Global Coronavirus Conference,” 
National Interest, May 4, 2020. 
Anne Applebaum, “The Rest of the World Is Laughing at Trump, The President Created a 
Leadership Vacuum. China Intends to Fill It,” Atlantic, May 3, 2020. 
Charlotte Klein, “Trump’s ‘America First’ Mentality May Hamper Global Race For Coronavirus 
Vaccine,” Vanity Fair, May 3, 2020. 
Nahal Toosi and Natasha Bertrand, “Fears Rise that Trump Will Incite a Global Vaccine Brawl, 
The President’s ‘America First’ Philosophy Courts Disaster for Entire Regions of the World, 
Diplomats Warn,” Politico, May 3, 2020. 
                                                 
7 This section presents citations dating back to April 1, 2020. For about 15 additional citations with earlier dates, see 
the previous (May 8, 2020) version of this CRS report. 
Congressional Research Service 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Kori Schake, “America’s Built-in Protection Against Bad Leadership, For All Its Failures, the 
U.S. Has Structural Advantages Over Rival Powers—and Will Come Out of the Pandemic Even 
Stronger,” Atlantic, May 1, 2020. 
Colum Lynch, “WHO Becomes Battleground as Trump Chooses Pandemic Confrontation Over 
Cooperation,” Foreign Policy, April 29, 2020. 
J. Stephen Morrison and Anna Carroll, “WHO and President Trump on the Ledge,” Center for 
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), April 28, 2020. 
Jeffrey Becker, “COVID-19 Offers a Golden Opportunity to Reengage with the Indo-Pacific,” 
Defense One, April 27, 2020. 
Joseph S. Nye, “How COVID-19 Is Testing American Leadership,” East Asia Forum, April 26, 
2020. 
By John Hudson, Josh Dawsey, and Souad Mekhennet, “Trump Expands Battle with WHO Far 
Beyond Aid Suspension,” Washington Post, April 25, 2020. 
Katrin Bennhold, “‘Sadness’ and Disbelief From a World Missing American Leadership,” New 
York Times, April 23, 2020. 
David Brunnstrom and Humeyra Pamuk, “Pompeo Says U.S. May Never Restore WHO Funds 
after Cutoff over Pandemic,” Reuters, April 23, 2020. 
Julianne Smith and Garima Mohan, “In a Crisis, a Fumbling America Confirms Europe’s Worst 
Fears,” War on the Rocks, April 23, 2020. 
Luke Allen, “Why Trump Defunded the WHO,” National Interest, April 20, 2020. 
Yu-Jie Chen and Jerome A. Cohen, “Trump Is Right That the WHO Has a China Problem. 
Cutting Funding Isn’t the Answer,” Diplomat, April 20, 2020. 
Jeffrey Cimmino, “Trump Should Be Tough On the WHO – And Recommit to Strengthening 
Global Health Security,” National Interest, April 19, 2020. 
Fred Hiatt, “Trump Should Be Playing to America’s Strengths. Instead, He Sinks to China’s 
Level,” Washington Post, April 19, 2020. 
Brett D. Schaefer, “The World Health Organization Messed Up—But Don't Defund Them,” 
National Interest, April 16, 2020. 
Salvatore Babones, “Donald Trump Is Right To Dump the WHO,” National Interest, April 15, 
2020. 
Kevin Baron, “Don’t Be Fooled. Trump’s Cuts to WHO Aren’t About the Coronavirus,” Defense 
One, April 15, 2020. 
Bonnie Kristian, “The Coronavirus Shows How US ‘Diplomacy’ Is Anything But, Absolutist, 
America-First Approaches Isolate Us and Make Us Less Safe,” Defense One, April 15, 2020. 
Eli Lake, “Trump Is Punishing the WHO for China’s Deceptions,” Bloomberg, April 15, 2020. 
Thomas R. Pickering and Atman Trivedi, “America First? The Coronavirus Couldn’t Care Less,” 
Foreign Policy, April 15, 2020. 
Emily Rauhala, “Trump’s Critique of WHO May Be a Diversion, But It Resonates Beyond the 
White House,” Washington Post, April 15, 2020. 
Steve Holland, “Trump to Convene G7 Leaders in Video Call to Discuss Pandemic,” Reuters, 
April 14, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Fred Kaplan, “The End of American Leadership, The Coronavirus Pandemic May Mark the Final 
Shift of Global Power Away from the United States,” Slate, April 13, 2020. 
Michael Shoebridge, “Why America Will Emerge Stronger From the Coronavirus Crisis,” 
National Interest, April 12, 2020. 
Bill Ong Hing, “Trump Has Achieved His Goal of Abolishing Asylum, The Pandemic Has Added 
One More Insurmountable Hurdle for Asylum Seekers,” Slate, April 10, 2020. 
Michèle A. Flournoy and Lisa O. Monaco, “Now’s Not the Time for Isolationism, Countries 
Need to Work Together to Fight Coronavirus, and the U.S. Should Step Up to Lead Those Efforts, 
Not Back Off From Them,” Politico, April 8, 2020. 
Todd Prince, “Pompeo Touts U.S. Foreign Help Against Pandemic As Trump Threatens WHO 
Funding,” Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, April 8, 2020. 
Joe Buccino, “The US Must Lead the World Out of This, If the Coronavirus Pandemic Only 
Causes Us to Look Inward, China Wins,” Defense One, April 7, 2020. 
Helle C. Dale, “Even in Pandemic, America Still the Global Leader,” Heritage Foundation, April 
7, 2020. 
John Pomfret, “Does the Future Still Belong to the U.S. and China?” Washington Post, April 7, 
2020. 
Robert B. Zoellick, “The World Is Watching How America Handles Coronavirus, The Trump 
Administration Has Failed to Convey An Impression of Strong International Leadership,” Wall 
Street Journal, April 7, 2020. 
Ted Anthony, “After Virus, How Will Americans’ View of the World Change?” Washington Post, 
April 6, 2020. 
William J. Burns, “A Make-or-Break Test for American Diplomacy, The Post-Pandemic World 
Will Pose a Massive Test for U.S. Statecraft, the Biggest Since the End of the Cold War,” 
Atlantic, April 6, 2020. 
Victor Davis Hanson, “Don’t Be Fooled: Trump Is Leading the World Against Coronavirus,” 
National Interest, April 5, 2020. 
Lara Jakes, “When the Face of America Falls Ill: A Virus’s Toll on Diplomats,” New York Times, 
April 4, 2020. 
Nahal Toosi, “‘Lord of the Flies: PPE Edition’: U.S. Cast As Culprit in Global Scrum Over 
Coronavirus Supplies,” Politico, April 3, 2020. 
Stephen M. Walt, “The United States Can Still Win the Coronavirus Pandemic,” Foreign Policy, 
April 3, 2020. 
Susan B. Glasser, “The Coronavirus Is the World’s Only Superpower, Trump’s America? Not so 
Much,” New Yorker, April 2, 2020. 
Robbie Gramer and Colum Lynch, “In Global Leadership Void on Pandemic, Critics Ask: 
Where’s Pompeo?” Foreign Policy, April 2, 2020. 
Ash Jain, “Trump Just Missed a Perfect Opportunity to Reassert American Leadership, The G-20 
helped beat Ebola. Why can’t it do the same for the coronavirus?” Foreign Policy, April 2, 2020. 
Congressional Research Service 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Adam Tooze, “America Is Ailing—and Leading the World, The Coronavirus Pandemic Has Been 
a Humiliation for the United States—and Confirmation of Its Unmatched International Power,” 
Foreign Policy, April 1, 2020. 
Robert C. Rubel, “Canary In The Coal Mine: The US Navy’s Dilemmas As An Indication Of A 
Culminating Point In National Grand Strategy,” Journal of Political Risk, April 2020. 
China’s Potential Role as a Global Leader8 
Ruairidh Brown, “Beijing Heralds Success Over Coronavirus as Victory for Chinese Marxism,” 
National Interest, May 27, 2020. 
Ben Graham, “China’s Plan for $1.5 Trillion Belt and Road Empire Left in Tatters by 
Coronavirus Pandemic,” News.com.au, May 27, 2020. 
James Jay Carafano and Kurt Volker, “Building the Post-Pandemic World,” Heritage Foundation, 
May 26, 2020. 
Denny Roy, “China’s Domestic Politics Hamstring Its Diplomacy, Beijing Had a Chance to Make 
the Best of the Pandemic But Instead Has Turned the Opportunity into a Threat,” Asia Times, 
May 25, 2020. 
Steven Lee Myers, “Why China’s Move to Rein In Hong Kong Is Just the Start, Xi Jinping’s 
China, Emboldened by Its Handling of the Coronavirus Pandemic, No Longer Seems Constrained 
by the Threat of International Rebuke,” New York Times, May 24 (updated May 28), 2020. 
Jeffrey Cimmino, “Coronavirus Could Flatten the Curve of China’s Rise,” National Interest, May 
23, 2020. 
Brahma Chellaney, “China Is Its Own Worst Enemy,” Project Syndicate, May 22, 2020. 
Jacob Heilbrunn, “The Coronavirus and the US-Russia-China Triangle,” National Interest, May 
22, 2020. 
Joshua Kurlantzick, “China thinks the pandemic will make it the world’s new leader. It won’t,” 
Washington Post, May 22, 2020. 
Dylan MH Loh, “The Power and Limits of China’s ‘Mask Diplomacy,’” East Asia Forum, May 
22, 2020. 
Tim Gosling, “China’s Mask Diplomacy Won’t Work in the Czech Republic,” Foreign Policy, 
May 21, 2020. 
Marc A. Thiessen, “China Is Using COVID-19 to Throttle Hong Kong’s Pro-democracy 
Movement,” Washington Post, May 21, 2020. 
Michael Peel, Demetri Sevastopulo, Thomas Hale, and Camilla Hodgson, “Xi Seeks to Cast 
China as Guardian of Global Order, China’s President Addresses WHO Amid International 
Tension and Skepticism over Covid-19 Response,” Financial Times, May 18, 2020. 
Emilie Kao, “China's Changing of International Norms Could Lead to Chaos,” National Interest, 
May 17, 2020. 
                                                 
8 This section presents citations dating back to April 15, 2020. For about 20 additional citations with earlier dates, see 
the previous (May 8, 2020) version of this CRS report. 
Congressional Research Service 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Chris Buckley and Steven Lee Myers, “From ‘Respect’ to ‘Sick and Twisted’: How Coronavirus 
Hit U.S.-China Ties, A Sharp Escalation of Tensions Over the Handling of the Pandemic Has 
Raised the Specter of a New Cold War,” New York Times, May 15 (updated May 17), 2020. 
Ravi Kant, “The Rise of the Chinese World Order, For Better or Worse, China is Capitalizing on 
the Covid-19 Crisis to Rewrite the Rules,” Asia Times, May 12, 2020. 
Kathrin Hille, “‘Wolf warrior’ diplomats reveal China’s ambitions, Beijing’s Emissaries Have 
Ditched Niceties for Threats During Coronavirus Crisis,” Financial Times, May 11, 2020. 
Brahma Chellaney, “The World Faces a Moment of Truth on China,” Japan Times, May 10, 2020. 
Kathleen Parker, “The Coronavirus Has Helped Us Finally See China for What It Is,” Washington 
Post, May 8, 2020. 
David M. Weinberg, “Know Comment: Hold China culpable for COVID-19, Don’t Let Beijing 
Exploit the Coronavirus Chaos to Position Itself at the Center of a New Global Order,” Jerusalem 
Post, May 8, 2020. 
Andreas Kluth, “How China Is Losing Europe,” Bloomberg, May 7, 2020. 
Josh Rogin, “The Pandemic Shows Why Taiwan Is a Far Better Partner than the People’s 
Republic,” Washington Post, May 7, 2020. 
Eva Dou, “Fearing Political Dangers, China Spent Years Preparing for This Economic Crash,” 
Washington Post, May 5, 2020. 
Diana Fu, “China Has a Playbook for Managing Coronavirus Chaos,” Foreign Policy, May 5, 
2020. 
William A. Stanton, “Wuhan Virus Finally Alters Global Perceptions of the PRC: William 
Stanton,” Taiwan News, May 5, 2020. 
Shashank Bengali and Alice Su, “‘Put On a Mask and Shut Up’: China’s New ‘Wolf Warriors’ 
Spread Hoaxes and Attack a World of Critics,” Los Angeles Times, May 4, 2020. 
“Exclusive: Internal Chinese Report Warns Beijing Faces Tiananmen-like Global Backlash Over 
Virus,” Reuters, May 4, 2020. (This article does not list an author.) 
Steven Erlanger, “Global Backlash Builds Against China Over Coronavirus,” New York Times, 
May 3, 2020. 
Xianbai Ji, “Will COVID-19 Be a Blessing in Disguise for the Belt and Road?” Diplomat, May 2, 
2020. 
Lara Marlowe, “Europe’s Relationship with China Is Now One of Mistrust and Hostility,” Irish 
Times, May 2, 2020. 
Joel Gehrke, “US Allies Move Toward Trump, Demanding Coronavirus Investigation Despite 
Chinese Threats,” Washington Examiner, May 1, 2020. 
Stuart Lau, “Coronavirus: European Union Ratchets Up Pressure on China with Call to Cooperate 
with inquiry,” South China Morning Post, May 1 (updated May 2), 2020. 
Minxin Pei, “China's Expensive Bet on Africa Has Failed, Coronavirus Crash in Commodity 
Prices Has Wasted $200 Billion in Investment and Loans,” Nikkei Asian Review, May 1, 2020. 
Matt Apuzzo, “Top E.U. Diplomat Says Disinformation Report Was Not Watered Down for 
China,” New York Times, April 30, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Niall Gray, “COVID-19: A ‘Reckoning’ for UK-China Relations?” Diplomat, April 29, 2020 
James Griffiths, “China’s Model of Control Has Been Blamed for the Coronavirus Crisis, But for 
Some It’s Looking Increasingly Attractive,” CNN, April 29, 2020. 
Tanvi Madan et al., “China’s Neighbors Face a Belligerent Post-Pandemic Beijing, Experts 
Discuss the Regional Fallout of the Coronavirus Crisis,” Foreign Policy, April 29, 2020. 
William Brent, “Generosity Is an Easy Win for China After the Coronavirus Pandemic,” Foreign 
Policy, April 28, 2020. 
Damien Cave and Amy Qin, “China Mounts Aggressive Defense to Calls for Coronavirus 
Compensation,” New York Times, April 28, 2020. 
Mark Magnier, “China Is Overreaching in Bid for Greater Global Influence Amid Coronavirus 
Pandemic, US Advisers Say,” South China Morning Post, April 28, 2020. 
Eleanor Albert, “African Countries Respond to Guangzhou’s ‘Anti-Epidemic Measures,’ 
Widespread Reports of Racism Against Africans Put China into Damage Control Mode,” 
Diplomat, April 27, 2020 
Shi Jiangtao, “Coronavirus: They’re Only Answering Xi Jinping’s Call but Are China’s ‘Wolf 
Warrior’ Diplomats Doing More Harm than Good?” South China Morning Post, April 27, 2020. 
Richard Javad Heydarian, “The Coming China Backlash, There Is a Pent-up Volcano of Rage 
Against the Chinese Regime for Its Reckless Coverup of a Devouring Pandemic,” National 
Interest, April 25, 2020. 
Keith B. Richburg, “After Coronavirus, China’s Relations With the World Will Never Be the 
Same,” National Interest, April 25, 2020. 
Jerry Dunleavy, “‘Xi Jinping’s Chernobyl’: Experts Say Chinese Disinformation Aims to Distract 
World from Coronavirus Failures,” Washington Examiner, April 23, 2020. 
David Ignatius, “The World Will Demand Answers on COVID-19 Until China Explains What 
Happened,” Washington Post, April 23, 2020. 
Veerle Nouwens, “China and the Coronavirus Pandemic: Internal Doubts, External Mistakes,” 
RUSI, April 23, 2020. 
Austin Bay, “On Point: The COVID-19 Debacle Previews the Chinese Communist Party’s 
Imperial World Order,” Strategy Page, April 22, 2020. 
Frederic Puglie, “China to the Rescue: ‘Mask Diplomacy’ Aims to Win Allies in Latin America,” 
Washington Times, April 22, 2020. 
Robert A. Manning, “Why China Will Be the Biggest COVID-19 Loser,” The Hill, April 21, 
2020. 
Daniel R. DePetris, “China’s Great Pandemic Gamble,” National Interest, April 20, 2020. 
Charles Dunst, “Beijing’s Propaganda Is Finding Few Takers,” Foreign Policy, April 20, 2020. 
Jamil Anderlini, “Why China is Losing the Coronavirus Narrative,” Financial Times, April 19, 
2020. 
Steven Lee Myers, “China’s Aggressive Diplomacy Weakens Xi Jinping’s Global Standing,” New 
York Times, April 17 (updated April 20), 2020. 
Congressional Research Service 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Maria Repnikova, “Does China’s Propaganda Work? The Communist Party’s Messaging Is Both 
More Agile and More Fragile Than It Seems,” New York Times, April 16, 2020. 
Charles Dunst, “How China’s Mask Diplomacy Backfired,” American Interest, April 15, 2020. 
Michael Green and Evan S. Medeiros, “The Pandemic Won’t Make China the World’s Leader, 
Few Countries Are Buying the Model or the Message From Beijing,” Foreign Affairs, April 15, 
2020. 
U.S. Relations and Great Power Competition with China and 
Russia9 
Hal Brands, “Coronavirus Hasn’t Killed the Global Balance of Power, Americans Who Hail a 
New Era of Global Cooperation Haven’t Been Paying Attention to What China Is Up To,” 
Bloomberg, May 27, 2020. 
Adam Kredo, “White House Pushes Back on Chinese Claims it Gives Most in Global Health 
Aid,” Washington Free Beacon, May 27, 2020. 
Peter Loftus and Drew Hinshaw, “‘Vaccine Nationalism’: A New Dynamic in the Race to Quash 
Coronavirus, International Pursuit for a Shot Is Shifting Into a Contest of Which World Power 
Can Immunize Its Population First,” Wall Street Journal, May 27, 2020. 
Grant Newsham “Last Chance for US to Counter China’s Rise, China Has Leveraged the Covid-
19 Crisis to Assert Its Power Across Asia While Traditional US Allies Feel Increasingly Left in 
the Lurch,” Asia Times, May 27, 2020. 
Josh Rogin, “We Must Find Bipartisanship on the China Issue,” Washington Post, May 27, 2020. 
Marc Siegel, “The Battle of COVID in the ‘Quiet war’ on China,” The Hill, May 27, 2020. 
Bloomberg News, “Xi Seeks Victory Over Trump in Race for a Covid-19 Vaccine,” Bloomberg, 
May 26, 2020. 
Andrew Foxhall, “Ending the Dangerous U.S. Dependence on China,” National Review, May 26, 
2020. 
Seth J. Frantzman, “How to Avoid a China-Led World Order,” National Review, May 25, 2020. 
William R. Hawkins, “Post-Coronavirus Asia: A Land of Great Power Tensions Set to Boil 
Over?” National Interest, May 24, 2020. 
Sukjoon Yoon, “Welcome to the Coronavirus Cold War, The United States and China Have Both 
Treated the Pandemic as Another Opportunity to Play Power Politics in the South China Sea,” 
National Interest, May 23, 2020. 
Josh Rogin, “Covid-19 Has Brought Trump’s Warring China Factions Together,” Washington 
Post, May 21, 2020. 
Noah Barkin, “In the Post-Pandemic Cold War, America Is Losing Europe, In the Growing 
Confrontation with China, Europe Is Starting to Take Sides—Just not America’s,” Foreign 
Policy, May 19, 2020. 
                                                 
9 This section presents citations dating back to May 1, 2020. For more than 100 additional citations with earlier dates, 
see the previous (May 8, 2020) version of this CRS report. 
Congressional Research Service 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
John Poindexter, Robert McFarlane, and Richard Levine, “What U.S. National Strategy Should 
Look Like In The Wake Of Coronavirus,” Federalist, May 19, 2020. 
Charles Edel and Mira Rapp-Hooper, “The 5 Ways U.S.-China Competition Is Hardening, The 
Pandemic Has Accelerated Preexisting Tensions—and There’s No Slowdown in Sight,” Foreign 
Policy, May 18, 2020. 
Joshua Eisenman and Devin Stewart, “How Trump’s Constant Attacks on China over 
Coronavirus Won't Help,” National Interest, May 15, 2020. 
Fred Kaplan, “Stuck in the Middle, Distrusting Both the U.S. and China, Midsize Powers Are 
Trying to Band Together. It Won’t Be Easy,” Slate, May 15, 2020. 
Ishaan Tharoor, “Is a U.S.-China Cold War Already Underway?” Washington Post, May 15, 2020. 
Keith Johnson and Robbie Gramer, “The Great Decoupling, Washington Is Pressing for a Post-
Pandemic Decoupling from China. But the Last Big Economic Split Brought on Two World Wars 
and a Depression. What’s in Store This Time?” Foreign Policy, May 14, 2020. 
Tsukasa Hadano and Alex Fang, “China steps up maritime activity with eye on post-pandemic 
order, Incursions in South and East China Seas Heat Up Rivalry with US,” Nikkei Asian Review, 
May 13, 2020. 
Paul Heer, “America’s Coronavirus Blame Game Must End,” National Interest, May 13, 2020. 
Ryan Gallagher, “China’s Disinformation Effort Targets Virus, Researcher Says,” Bloomberg, 
May 12 (updated May 13), 2020. 
Olivia Enos, “Holding the Chinese Communist Party Accountable for Its Response to the 
COVID-19 Outbreak,” Heritage Foundation, May 12, 2020. 
Evan Osnos, “The Folly of Trump’s Blame-Beijing Coronavirus Strategy,” New Yorker, May 10, 
2020. 
Marc Champion, “Trump’s Going All In on a Vaccine. He May Still Get Beaten by China, The 
Nation That Can Immunize First Stands to Gain Not Just Economic Advantage, But Validation of 
Its Place in the World,” Bloomberg, May 8, 2020. 
Editorial Board, “Donald Trump’s Erratic China Policy Undermines Western Unity,” Financial 
Times, May 7, 2020. 
Patrick Tucker, “COVID-19 Is Accelerating Trends in the US-China Relationship,” Defense One, 
May 7, 2020. 
Frances Martel, “China: If We Have to Pay for Coronavirus, U.S. Has to Pay for AIDS, 2008 
Financial Crisis,” Breitbart, May 7, 2020. 
Joel Gehrke, “US and Western Allies Offer Disjointed Response to China Coronavirus Calamity,” 
Washington Examiner, May 6, 2020. 
Kate O’Keeffe, Michael C. Bender, and Chun Han Wong, “Coronavirus Casts Deep Chill Over 
U.S.-China Relations,” Wall Street Journal, May 6, 2020. 
RFE/RL, “U.S.: Russia, China Spinning Coronavirus Conspiracies To Blame West,” Radio Free 
Europe/Radio Liberty, May 6, 2020. 
Kevin Rudd, “The Coming Post-COVID Anarchy, The Pandemic Bodes Ill for Both American 
and Chinese Power—and for the Global Order,” Foreign Affairs, May 6, 2020. 
Congressional Research Service 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
“The U.S. Weaponizes COVID-19 Anger Against China’s Tech Sector,” Stratfor, May 6, 2020. 
(This article does not list an author.) 
Doug Bandow, “Making China Pay Would Cost Americans Dearly,” Foreign Policy, May 5, 
2020. 
Bloomberg News, “As Trump Blames China, Beijing Directs Fury at His Top Diplomat,” 
Bloomberg, May 5, 2020. 
James Jay Carafano, “How to Keep the Free World From Becoming a Suburb of Beijing,” 
Heritage Foundation, May 5, 2020. 
Ali Wyne, “Can China Use the Pandemic to Displace the US?” Defense One, May 5, 2020. 
Stephen Blank, “The Russo-Chinese Axis Reveals Itself During the Coronavirus Pandemic,” The 
Hill, May 4, 2020. 
Ryan Hass, “Clouded Thinking in Washington and Beijing on COVID-19 Crisis,” Brookings 
Institution, May 4, 2020. 
Deb Riechmann and Zeke Miller, “Trump’s Anti-China Rhetoric Aimed at Boosting US 
Leverage,” Associated Press, May 4, 2020. 
Denny Roy, “8 Chinese Arguments Against Western ‘Hubris’ and Why They Fail,” Diplomat, 
May 04, 2020. 
David Wertime, “‘Not the World’s Number One’: Chinese Social Media Piles On the U.S.,” 
Politico, May 4, 2020. 
John Lee, “US-China Economic Distancing in the Era of Great Power Rivalry and COVID-19,” 
United States Studies Centre, May 4, 2020. 
Humeyra Pamuk and Andrea Shalal, “Trump Administration Pushing to Rip Global Supply 
Chains from China: Officials,” Reuters, May 4, 2020. 
David Wertime, “‘Not the World’s Number One’: Chinese Social Media Piles On the U.S.,” 
Politico, May 4, 2020. 
Claudia Rosett, “China Is Exploiting the Coronavirus Chaos to Advance Its Agenda, President Xi 
Wants China at the Center of a New Global Order,” Dallas Morning News, May 3, 2020. 
Walter Lohman James Jay Carafano, “Here Are Ten Ways To Beat China Over Coronavirus,” 
National Interest, May 2, 2020. 
Eric Chan and Peter Loftus, “Chinese Communist Party Information Warfare: US-China 
Competition during the COVID-19 Pandemic,” Journal of Indo-Pacific Affairs (Air University), 
May 1, 2020. 
Ahmed Charai, “How COVID-19 Changes Trump’s China Card,” National Interest, May 1, 2020. 
Bonnie Kristian, “‘Maximum Pressure’ on China Is No Solution to a Pandemic,” Defense News, 
May 1, 2020. 
Dalibor Rohac, “The Kremlin’s Tried-and-True Formula for Tough Times: Look for Enemies 
Abroad,” Washington Post, May 1, 2020. 
Alex Ward, “Pressure Mounts on Trump to ‘Drop the Hammer’ on China,” Vox, May 1, 2020. 
Edward Wong and Ana Swanson, “Some Trump Officials Take Harder Actions on China During 
Pandemic,” New York Times, May 1, 2020. 
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Democracy, Authoritarianism, and Autocracy 
Robin Niblett and Leslie Vinjamuri, “Op-Ed: Why Democracies Do Better at Surviving 
Pandemics,” Los Angeles Times, May 26, 2020. 
Justin Sherman, “War Rhetoric Surrounds COVID Surveillance,” C4ISRnet, May 22, 2020. 
Mu Sochua, “Coronavirus ‘Fake News’ Arrests Are Quieting Critics, In Southeast Asia, the 
Coronavirus Pandemic Has Provided a Handy Excuse for a Clampdown on Free Speech,” 
Foreign Policy, May 22, 2020. 
Jacob Wallace and Darcy Palder, “The Coronavirus Is Delaying Elections Worldwide, Moldova 
and Oman Join a Growing List of Countries Postponing Their Votes for the Sake of Public 
Health,” Foreign Policy, May 22, 2020. 
Holman W. Jenkins, Jr., “Coronavirus and Policy Chaos, Western Rights and Freedoms Now 
Prove a Strength in Adapting to the Pandemic,” Wall Street Journal, May 19, 2020. 
Josh Nadeau, “Putin Is Using the Pandemic to Consolidate Power, Public Health Is a Convenient 
Pretext for Extending Authoritarian Controls,” Foreign Policy, May 18, 2020. 
Margaret Tucker, “Symptoms May Include Censorship,” Slate, May 15, 2020. 
Joanna Kakissis, “European Parliament Lawmakers Demand Punishment For Hungary Over 
Emergency Powers,” NPR, May 14, 2020. 
Stuart Williams, Agence France-Presse, “For Europe’s Strongmen, Pandemic Is Opportunity and 
Risk,” Yahoo News, May 14, 2020. 
Steven Feldstein, “What Democracy Will Fall Next? Hungary Was the First Democratic Victim of 
the Coronavirus. It May Not Be the Last,” Foreign Policy, May 7, 2020. 
Kemal Kirisci, “The Coronavirus Has Led to More Authoritarianism for Turkey,” National 
Interest, May 6, 2020.  
Febriana Firdaus. “Indonesians Fear Democracy Is the Next Pandemic Victim,” Foreign Policy, 
May 4, 2020. 
Margarita R. Seminario and Claudia Fernandez, “Free Press, Fake News, and Repression during 
Covid-19: Venezuela, Brazil, and Nicaragua,” Center for Strategic and International Studies 
(CSIS), May 4, 2020. 
Jeffrey Smith and Nic Cheeseman, “Authoritarians Are Exploiting the Coronavirus. Democracies 
Must Not Follow Suit,” Foreign Policy, April 28, 2020. 
Alexander Cooley and Daniel Nexon, “Why Populists Want a Multipolar World, Aspiring 
Authoritarians Are Sick of the Liberal Order and Eager for New Patrons in Russia and China,” 
National Interest, April 25, 2020. 
Editorial Board, “How China’s Authoritarian System Made the Pandemic Worse,” Washington 
Post, April 17, 2020. 
Andrea Kendall-Taylor and Carisa Nietsche, “The Coronavirus Is Exposing Populists’ Hollow 
Politics, As the Crisis Worsens, Even More Extreme Groups May Prosper,” Foreign Policy, April 
16, 2020. 
Emily Schultheis, “Coronavirus Has Paralyzed Europe’s Far Right,” Foreign Policy, April 14, 
2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Mason Clark and Aidan Therrien, “Russia in Review: Kremlin Tests Authoritarian Societal 
Control Measures During COVID-19 Crisis,” Institute for the Study of War, April 13, 2020. 
Suzanne Nossel, “Don’t Let Leaders Use the Coronavirus as an Excuse to Violate Civil 
Liberties,” Foreign Policy, April 13, 2020. 
Stephen M. Walt, “The United States Is Getting Infected With Dictatorship,” Foreign Policy, 
April 13, 2020. 
Michael Birnbaum and Terrence McCoy, “As Leaders Seize Powers to Fight Coronavirus, Fear 
Grows for Democracy,” Washington Post, April 12, 2020. 
Steve H. Hanke, “Crises Enliven ‘Totalitarian Temptations,’” Cato Institute, April 10, 2020. 
Elisabeth Zerofsky, “How Viktor Orbán Used the Coronavirus to Seize More Power,” New 
Yorker, April 9, 2020. 
Tom G. Palmer and Simon Lee, “How One Pandemic Leads to Another,” Cato Institute, April 8, 
2020. 
Frances Z. Brown and Saskia Brechenmacher, and Thomas Carothers, “How Will the 
Coronavirus Reshape Democracy and Governance Globally?” Carnegie Endowment for 
International Peace, April, 6 2020. 
James Lamond, “Authoritarian Regimes Seek To Take Advantage of the Coronavirus Pandemic,” 
Center for American Progress, April 6, 2020. 
Seth J. Frantzman, “Coronavirus Is Empowering Dictators And Changing The World Order,” 
National Interest, April 4, 2020. 
Joshua Kurlantzick, “Dictators Are Using the Coronavirus to Strengthen Their Grip on Power,” 
Washington Post, April 3, 2020. 
John Haltiwanger, “The Coronavirus Just Created a New Dictator in Europe and Has Emboldened 
the Toxic Behavior of Authoritarians Worldwide,” Business Insider, April 1, 2020. 
Luke McGee, “Power-Hungry Leaders Are Itching to Exploit the Coronavirus Crisis,” CNN, 
April 1, 2020. 
Jacob Mchangama and Sarah McLaughlin, “Coronavirus Has Started a Censorship Pandemic,” 
Foreign Policy, April 1, 2020. 
Florian Bieber, “Authoritarianism in the Time of the Coronavirus, The Pandemic Offers 
Dictators—and Democracies Alike—an Opportunity for Abuse,” Foreign Policy, March 30, 
2020. 
Selam Gebrekidan, “For Autocrats, and Others, Coronavirus Is a Chance to Grab Even More 
Power,” New York Times, March 30, 2020. 
Anne Applebaum, “The People in Charge See an Opportunity, Around the World, Rulers Are 
Using the Pandemic As An Excuse to Grab More Power. And the Public Is Going Along with It,” 
Atlantic, March 23, 2020. 
Melinda Haring and Doug Klain, “Why Autocrats Love Coronavirus,” National Interest, March 
22, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Societal Tension, Reform, and Transformation, and 
Governmental Stability 
Robyn Dixon, “In Russia’s Pandemic Struggles, Even Putin Couldn’t Speed Bonuses to Health 
Workers,” Washington Post, May 27, 2020. 
Cyrus Newlin and Heather A. Conley, “Responding to a Pandemic, Putin Trades Russia’s Future 
for His Own,” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), May 27, 2020. 
Will Todman, “Assad Attempts to Weaponize COVID-19 in Syria,” The Hill, May 27, 2020. 
Nisha Bellinger and Kyle Kattelman, “The Coronavirus Is Boosting Terror Threats in the 
Developing World, The Pandemic Exacerbates Worsen Existing Food Crises, Undermining 
Stability,” Defense One, May 26, 2020. 
Husain Haqqani and Aparna Pande, “Crisis from Kolkata to Kabul: COVID-19’s Impact on South 
Asia,” Hudson Institute, May 26, 2020. 
Herman Pirchner Jr., “Vladimir Putin’s Increasingly Precarious Future,” National Interest, May 
26, 2020. 
Colm Quinn, “Do Poor Countries Face a Greater Risk From Coronavirus? The WHO Chief Is 
‘Very Concerned’ About Rising Cases in Poorer Countries, as Worldwide Cases Pass Five 
Million,” Foreign Policy, May 21, 2020. 
Brian Whitmore, “The Kremlin's Numbers Rracket, A Persistent and Prolific Propaganda 
Machine Meets a Deadly Global Pandemic. Now What Happens?” Center for European Policy 
Analysis (CEPA), May 19, 2020. 
Janusz Bugajski, “Ethnic Echoes, The Pandemic is Animating Europe’s Ethnic and Regional 
Disputes,” Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), May 18, 2020. 
James Crabtree et al., “How the Coronavirus Pandemic Will Permanently Expand Government 
Powers, Ten Leading Global Thinkers on an Expansion of Government Powers,” Foreign Policy, 
May 16, 2020. (Includes short contributions from 10 observers.) 
Polina Beliakova, “COVID-19 and the Limits of Putin’s Power,” War on the Rocks, May 13, 
2020. 
Sidney Lang, “Coronavirus: China Faces Historic Test as Pandemic Stokes Fears of Looming 
Unemployment Crisis,” South China Morning Post, May 11, 2020. 
Robyn Dixon, “Putin Knows How to Rule Russia as An Autocrat. But He Seems on the Sidelines 
Amid Coronavirus Crisis,” Washington Post, May 7, 2020. 
Ann M. Simmons, “In Russia, Putin Wrestles With Economic Impact of Coronavirus,” Wall Street 
Journal, May 6, 2020. 
Judd Devermont and Simon Allison, “Covid-19 in Africa: The Good News and the Bad,” Center 
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), May 4, 2020. 
Nathan Hodge, “As Coronavirus Hits Record Numbers in Russia, This Is a Dangerous Moment 
for Putin,” CNN, May 4, 2020. 
Clara Ferreira Marques, “Coronavirus Has Exposed Putin’s Brittle Regime,” Bloomberg, May 4, 
2020. 
Henry Foy, “Russia: Pandemic Tests Putin’s Grip on Power,” Financial Times, May 4, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Cary Huang, “Coronavirus: China Faces an Economic Reckoning as Covid-19 Turns World 
Against Globalisation,” South China Morning Post, May 3, 2020. 
Minxin Pei, “China’s Coming Upheaval, Competition, the Coronavirus, and the Weakness of Xi 
Jinping,” Foreign Affairs, May/June 2020. 
Andrew Higgins, “Putin, Russia’s Man of Action, Is Passive, Even Bored, in the Coronavirus 
Era,” New York Times, April 30, 2020. 
Nael M. Shama, “In Egypt, the Coronavirus Poses a Political Threat,” Foreign Policy, April 30, 
2020. 
Don Weinland, “China Slowdown Puts Xi in Political Bind, Coronavirus Threatens Communist 
Party’s Aim of Widespread Prosperity by End of 2020,” Financial Times, April 28, 2020. 
Editorial Board, “Russia’s Economic Woes Will Clip Vladimir Putin’s Wings, Pandemic 
Combined with Collapsing Oil Prices Spells Real Hardship,” Financial Times, April 27, 2020. 
Lance Kokonos, “Coronavirus Is Making Russia’s Demographic Disaster Even Worse,” National 
Interest, April 25, 2020. 
Leon Aron, “The Coronavirus Could Imperil Putin’s Presidency,” Wall Street Journal, April 23, 
2020. 
Holly Ellyatt, “Coronavirus Is a ‘Challenge’ for Putin and ‘Huge Danger’ for the World, Kremlin 
Warns,” CNBC, April 22, 2020. 
Rick Gladstone, “Oil Collapse and Covid-19 Create Toxic Geopolitical Stew,” New York Times, 
April 22, 2020. 
Sarah Rainsford, “Coronavirus Crisis Tests Putin’s Grip on Power in Russia,” BBC, April 22, 
2020. 
Armand Gosu, “Russia Needs an OPEC+ 2.0 Accord to Avoid a Crisis,” Middle East Institute, 
April 21, 2020. 
Patrick Tucker, “Putin Is Projecting Strength In the Face of Coronavirus. But the Image is 
Cracked,” Defense One, April 21, 2020. 
Brian Whitmore, “The Desanctification of Putin, The Political Costs of COVID-19 Are 
Beginning to Mount,” Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), April 21, 2020. 
Steven Erlanger, “Coronavirus Has Lifted Leaders Everywhere. Don’t Expect That to Last,” New 
York Times, April 15, 2020. 
James Traub, “After the Coronavirus, the Era of Small Government Will Be Over,” Foreign 
Policy, April 15, 2020. 
Frances Z. Brown and Jarrett Blanc, “Coronavirus in Conflict Zones: A Sobering Landscape,” 
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, April 14, 2020. (Includes links to 12 additional 
writings by various authors focusing on situations in specific countries and regions.) 
Michael Albertus, “The Coronavirus Will Cause New Crises in Latin America,” Foreign Policy, 
April 16, 2020. 
Samuel Brannen, “Will Covid-19 End the Age of Mass Protests?” Center for Strategic and 
International Studies (CSIS), April 7, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Kyle Harper, “The Coronavirus Is Accelerating History Past the Breaking Point, Every Era Gets 
the Infectious Diseases—and the Resulting Political Upheaval—It Has Coming,” Foreign Policy, 
April 6, 2020. 
Anthony Faiola, Lindzi Wessel, and Shibani Mahtani, “Coronavirus Chills Protests from Chile to 
Hong Kong to Iraq, Forcing Activists to Innovate,” Washington Post, April 4, 2020. 
James Jay Carafano, “Coronavirus and Regime Change—Will This Plague Topple Nations Great 
and Small?” Heritage Foundation, April 1, 2020. 
Nic Cheeseman, “The Coronavirus Could Topple Governments Around the World,” Foreign 
Policy, March 31, 2020. 
Carolyn Whitzman, “Could Coronavirus Lead To a Fairer World?” National Interest, March 31, 
2020. 
Elizabeth Kolbert, “Pandemics and the Shape of Human History, Outbreaks Have Sparked Riots 
and Propelled Public-Health Innovations, Prefigured Revolutions and Redrawn Maps,” New 
Yorker, March 20, 2020. 
Simon Mair, “Why Coronavirus May Change the World (For Better or Worse),” National Interest, 
March 30, 2020. 
Nicholas Mulder, “The Coronavirus War Economy Will Change the World,” Foreign Policy, 
March 26, 2020. 
World Economy, Globalization, and U.S. Trade Policy 
Evelyn Cheng, “China May Become One of Many Hubs as Companies Diversify Manufacturing 
After Coronavirus Shock,” CNBC, May 25, 2020. 
Joshua Posaner, “Merkel Warns Against Trade Barriers in Face of Coronavirus Recession,” 
Politico, May 20, 2020. 
Frank G. Wisner Matthew Kirk, “Here’s What the Coronavirus Means for the Future of 
Geopolitics and Trade,” National Interest, May 18, 2020. 
Barak M. Seener, “The World is Round: Shifting Supply Chains and a Fragmented World Order,” 
National Interest, May 16, 2020. 
Rhonda Ferguson, “Why Coronavirus Is an Opportunity to Transform the Global Food Trade,” 
National Interest, May 11, 2020. 
Asa Fitch, Kate O’Keeffe, and Bob Davis, “Trump and Chip Makers Including Intel Seek 
Semiconductor Self-Sufficiency, Pentagon Says Coronavirus Pandemic Underscores 
Vulnerability from Reliance on Asian Factories,” Wall Street Journal, May 11, 2020. 
Robert E. Lighthizer, “The Era of Offshoring U.S. Jobs Is Over, The Pandemic, and Trump’s 
Trade Policy, Are Accelerating a Trend to Bring Manufacturing Back to America,” New York 
Times, May 11, 2020. 
Michael Nienaber, “Germany’s Altmaier Wants Europe to Be Less Dependent on Other 
Countries,” Reuters, May 9, 2020. 
Aaron Friedberg, “The United States Needs to Reshape Global Supply Chains, U.S. Strategy 
Needs Reglobalization to Snatch Critical Power Away from China,” Foreign Policy, May 8, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Ana Quintana, James Roberts, and Anthony Kim, “A U.S.–Mexico-Canada (USMCA) Economic 
Partnership Recovery Plan,” Heritage Foundation, May 7, 2020. 
Desmond Lachman, “Could Italy Default on Its Debt Due to the Coronavirus?” National Interest, 
May 7, 2020. 
Ruchir Sharma, “The Pandemic Isn’t Changing Everything, It Is Just Speeding Up Trends That 
Were Already Underway,” New York Times, May 3, 2020. 
James Crabtree, “The End of Emerging Markets? Economies such as Brazil, Indonesia, India, 
Russia, and Turkey face a daunting new reality,” Foreign Policy, May 3, 2020. 
Kevin Sieff, “The U.S. Wants Mexico to Keep Its Defense and Health-Care Factories Open. 
Mexican Workers Are Getting Sick and Dying,” Washington Post, May 1, 2020. 
Ariel E. Levite and Lyu Jinghua, “Travails of an Interconnected World: From Pandemics to the 
Digital Economy,” Lawfare, April 30, 2020. 
Nathaniel Taplin, “Trump’s Trade Deal With China Is Another Coronavirus Victim, The 
Pandemic Is Exposing the Perils of Agreements Based on Numerical Targets Rather Than Tariff 
Reductions or Policy Concessions,” Wall Street Journal, April 30, 2020. 
Trevor Jackson, “Terminal Deflation Is Coming, Central Banks’ Interventions in the Pandemic 
Economy Are Unprecedentedly Vast—and Not Nearly Enough,” Foreign Policy, April 29, 2020. 
Greg Ip, “Globalization Is Down but Not Out Yet,” Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2020. 
Zhou Xin, “Coronavirus: How Will China’s Role in the Global Economy Change When Faced 
with Pandemic Backlash?” South China Morning Post, April 28, 2020. 
Nicholas Mulder and Adam Tooze, “The Coronavirus Oil Shock Is Just Getting Started,” Foreign 
Policy, April 23, 2020. 
Jack Detsch and Robbie Gramer, “The Coronavirus Could Upend Trump’s China Trade Deal,” 
Foreign Policy, April 21, 2020. 
Richard Fontaine, “Globalization Will Look Very Different After the Coronavirus Pandemic,” 
Foreign Policy, April 17, 2020. 
Neil Irwin, “It’s the End of the World Economy as We Know It, Experts Suggest There Will Be 
‘A Rethink of How Much Any Country Wants to Be Reliant on Any Other Country,’” New York 
Times, April 16, 2020. 
Robert Delaney, “Economic Havoc Wreaked by Coronavirus Has Likely Throttled US-China 
Trade Deal, Experts Say,” South China Morning Post, April 15, 2020. 
Joseph E. Stiglitz et al., “How the Economy Will Look After the Coronavirus Pandemic, The 
Pandemic Will Change the Economic and Financial Order Forever. We Asked Nine Leading 
Global Thinkers for Their Predictions,” Foreign Policy, April 15, 2020. 
Martin Wolf, “The World Economy Is Now Collapsing, A Microbe Has Overthrown Our 
Arrogance and Sent Global Output into a Tailspin,” Financial Times, April 14, 2020. 
Josh Zumbrun, “Coronavirus-Afflicted Global Economy Is Almost Certainly in Recession,” Wall 
Street Journal, April 14, 2020. 
By Raphael S. Cohen Sunday, “The Coronavirus Will Not Stop Globalization,” Lawfare, April 
12, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Dalia Marin, “How COVID-19 Is Transforming Manufacturing,” Project Syndicate, April 3, 
2020. 
Daniel J. Ikenson, “The Coronavirus Crisis Is the Worst Time For Trump To Put Up Trade 
Barriers,” National Interest, March 30, 2020. 
Simon Lester, “The Coronavirus Crisis Is the Right Time For Free Trade,” National Interest, 
March 30, 2020. 
David Frum, “The Coronavirus Is Demonstrating the Value of Globalization,” Atlantic, March 27, 
2020. 
Mie Oba, “Coronavirus and the Future of Globalization,” Diplomat, March 18, 2020. 
Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman, “Will the Coronavirus End Globalization as We Know It?” 
Foreign Affairs, March 16, 2020. 
Philippe Legrain Marc, “The Coronavirus Is Killing Globalization as We Know It,” Foreign 
Policy, March 12, 2020. 
Stephanie Segal and Dylan Gerstel, “The Global Economic Impacts of COVID-19,” Center for 
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), March 10, 2020. 
Allied Defense Spending and U.S. Alliances 
Steven Erlanger, “European Defense and ‘Strategic Autonomy’ Are Also Coronavirus Victims,” 
New York Times, May 23, 2020. 
Mihail Naydenov, “NATO and its Eastern Flank: Challenges of a Post-COVID Environment,” 
Middle East Institute, May 21, 2020. 
Silvia Amaro, “Coronavirus Could Hit Defense Spending and Spark NATO Tensions Once 
Again,” CNBC, May 13, 2020. 
Ben Doherty, “The Indispensable Nation? Covid-19 Tests the US-Australian Alliance,” Guardian, 
May 5, 2020. 
Wallace C. Gregson, “The Coronavirus Creates New National Security Problems for America,” 
National Defense, May 3, 2020. 
Marcus Weisgerber, “Global Defense Spending Decline Expected As Nations Deal with 
Coronavirus,” Defense One, April 28, 2020. 
Tom Kington, “Back Hard-Hit Businesses? Experts Press EU to Instead Boost Defense 
Spending,” Defense News, April 27, 2020. 
Clementine Starling, “Europe Was Just Getting Better at Moving Militaries,” Defense One, April 
22, 2020. 
Brooks Tigner, Brussels, “Covid-19: NATO to Review Military Resilience for Post-pandemic 
World,” Jane’s, April 17, 2020. 
Richard Fontaine, “We Need an Atlantic Charter for the Post-coronavirus Era,” Atlantic, April 16, 
2020. 
Deborah Haynes, “Coronavirus: NATO Chief Denies Alliance Has Responded Too Slowly to 
Pandemic,” Sky News, April 15, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Stéphanie Fillion, “In Canada, Patience Wearing Thin Over Trump’s Antics, A Threat to 
Militarize the Border and Attempts to Hold Up Lifesaving Medical Supplies Have Roiled the 
Calmest of Countries,” Foreign Policy, April 14, 2020. 
Sebastian Sprenger, “NATO Defense Ministers to Weigh Coronavirus Fallout,” Defense News, 
April 14, 2020. 
James Jay Carafano, “After Coronavirus—We Still Need Europe and They Need Us. Here’s What 
Has to Happen,” Heritage Foundation, April 13, 2020. 
Derek Chollet, Michał Baranowski, and Steven Keil, “Where is NATO? And Where is Trump? 
The Virus Is Destroying Economies and Paralyzing Societies in Ways Russian Military Planners 
Could Only Dream,” Defense One, April 13, 2020. 
Philip H. Gordon and Jeremy Shapiro, “The Atlantic Alliance Had Preexisting Conditions. The 
Pandemic Will Worsen Them,” War on the Rocks, April 13, 2020. 
Quentin Lopinot, “Europe Is at War with the Coronavirus. Where Does That Leave European 
Defense?” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), April 13, 2020. 
Janusz Bugajski, “Mind the Gap, And Don’t Succumb to Transatlantic Fever,” Center for 
European Policy Analysis (CEPA), April 10, 2020. 
Sophia Becker, Christian Mölling, and Torben Schütz, “The Coronavirus Threatens NATO. Let’s 
Move to Protect the Alliance,” Defense News, April 9, 2020. 
Matthew Karnitschnig and Judith Mischke, “Berlin Lets Mask Slip on Feelings for Trump’s 
America, The Crisis Has Convinced Germans That Trump Puts Other Countries at Risk,” 
Politico, April 6 (updated April 7), 2020. 
Andy Blatchford, “Trump’s Moves to Hold Medical Supplies Tip Trudeau to China,” Politico, 
April 4 (updated April 5), 2020. 
Dov S. Zakheim, “NATO’s Budget Virus: How the Pandemic Could Slash Military Spending,” 
The Hill, March 16, 2020. 
European Union 
Michael Birnbaum and Loveday Morris, “E.U. Proposes $825 Billion Coronavirus Rescue Plan 
Giving Brussels Power to Raise Money for First Time,” Washington Post, May 27, 2020. 
Editorial Board, “Europe Seeks Its ‘Hamilton Moment,’ Too Bad the EU Skips Over the Part 
About Democratic Legitimacy,” Wall Street Journal, May 27, 2020. 
Robin Emmott, “EU Keeps Defence Fund Alive with 8 Billion Euro Proposal,” Reuters, May 27, 
2020. 
Matina Stevis-Gridneff, “A €750 Billion Virus Recovery Plan Thrusts Europe Into a New 
Frontier,” New York Times, May 27 (updated May 28), 2020. 
Associated Press, “EU’s Top Diplomat Urges ‘More Robust Strategy’ Toward China,” 
Washington Post, May 25, 2020. 
Sylvie Kauffmann, “Can Europe Stay Back From the Brink? After Three Months of Chaos and 
Deaths Caused by the Pandemic, the Continent, Led by Germany and France, Is Giving 
Convergence Another Try,” New York Times, May 22, 2020. 
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Paul Hockenos, “Has the Coronavirus Disappeared Climate Politics? Europe’s Pandemic Bailouts 
Are Trying to Save the Continent’s Economy. Less Clear Is If They Can Save the Planet,” 
Foreign Policy, May 21, 2020. 
John Chalmers, Gabriela Baczynska, “‘It’s Up to Us’: How Merkel and Macron Revived EU 
Solidarity,” Reuters, May 20, 2020. 
Angela Charlton, Lorne Cook, and Jari Tanner (Associated Press), “Germany Breaks Taboo in 
Effort to Get EU Through Pandemic,” New York Times, May 19, 2020. 
Andreas Rinke and John Revill, “Europe Risks Being Left Behind China, U.S. by Coronavirus: 
Siemens CEO,” Reuters, May 19, 2020. 
Denise Roland, Noemie Bisserbe, and Nick Kostov, “Europe Falls Behind U.S. in Funding 
Coronavirus Vaccine—and Securing Access,” Wall Street Journal, May 19, 2020. 
Steven Erlanger, “Merkel, Breaking German ‘Taboo,’ Backs Shared E.U. Debt to Tackle Virus,” 
New York Times, May 18, 2020. 
Liam Kennedy, “How Coronavirus Revealed the Weakness of Europe, Coronavirus Has 
Underlined the Frailty of the ‘European Project’ and Deepened Anxiety About Its Future,” 
National Interest, May 14, 2020. 
Nikos Chrysoloras, “Debt Crisis, Brexit, Now Virus. Can the EU Survive?” Bloomberg, May 13, 
2020. 
Jennifer Rankin, “EU Faces ‘Existential Threat’ If Coronavirus Recovery Is Uneven,” Guardian, 
May 13, 2020. 
Andrew Small, “The Meaning of Systemic Rivalry: Europe and China Beyond the Pandemic,” 
European Council on Foreign Relations, May 13, 2020. 
Lorne Cook, “Concern Mounts That Border Measures Threaten EU Free Travel,” Associated 
Press, May 12, 2020. 
“EU’s Top Diplomat Warns Against Defense Cuts,” Defense News, May 12, 2020. (This article 
does not list an author.) 
Maya Sion-Tzidkiyahu, “Israel and the European Union in times of coronavirus pandemic,” 
Jerusalem Post, May 10, 2020. 
Bjarke Smith-Meyer and Paola Tamma, “Brussels Eyes a Bigger EU Shareholder Role in the 
Coronavirus Recovery,” Politico, May 10 (updated May 11), 2020. 
Michael Birnbaum, “E.U. Defends Handling of China Relations After Beijing Censors Op-ed 
Written by Bloc’s Ambassadors,” Washington Post, May 7, 2020. 
Heather A. Conley, “Covid-19 May Encourage a No-Deal Brexit,” Center for Strategic and 
International Studies (CSIS), May 7, 2020. 
Lorne Cook and Llazar Semini, “EU Aims to Reassure Balkans with Virus Aid, Economic 
Support,” Associated Press, May 6, 2020. 
Christopher Caldwell, “Can the European Union Survive a Pandemic? The Coronavirus Crisis 
Has Turned Its Member Nations Against Each Other,” New Republic, May 5, 2020. 
Rick Noack, “The Coronavirus Has Brought Back Border Barriers in Europe, Dividing Couples, 
Families and Communities,” Washington Post, May 1, 2020. 
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Donatienne Ruy and Heather A. Conley, “Covid-19 and the Search for an Ambitious EU 
Recovery Fund,” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), May 1, 2020. 
Sinan Ulgen, “The Coronavirus Is Creating a Crisis on Europe’s Borders,” Foreign Policy, May 
1, 2020. 
Spencer Wong, “Is the Coronavirus Ushering in an Era of Eurosceptic Leaders? The Pandemic 
Could Very Well Be a Watershed Moment in European Politics,” National Interest, April 29, 
2020. 
Elisabeth Braw, “Forget Washington and Beijing. These Days Global Leadership Comes From 
Berlin,” Foreign Policy, April 28, 2020. 
Rikard Jozwiak, “EU Monitors See Coordinated COVID-19 Disinformation Effort By Iran, 
Russia, China,” Radio Farda, April 23, 2020. 
Jennifer Rankin, “How Covid-19 Poured Cold Water on Netherlands’ EU Romance,” Guardian 
(UK), April 23, 2020. 
Peter Rough, “The European Union Needs More National Flexibility,” National Review, April 22, 
2020. 
Donatienne Ruy, “Fault Lines and Prospects for European Solidarity,” Center for Strategic and 
International Studies (CSIS), April 22, 2020. 
Bashkim Smakaj, “COVID-19 and the Need for Deep EU Reform,” Euractiv, April 22, 2020. 
HJ Mai, “The Coronavirus Could Tear the EU Apart,” Vox, April 21, 2020. 
Stephania Taladrid, “What the Coronavirus Means for Europe’s Future,” New Yorker, April 21, 
2020. 
Sam Fleming, “EU Coronavirus Recovery Fund Plans Face Political Bear Traps,” Financial 
Times, April 20, 2020. 
Andrea Dudik and Flavia Krause-Jackson, “Albania’s European Dream Is Just Out of Reach, As 
the Coronavirus Widens Fractures in the EU, Hopes of a Larger Europe Fade,” Bloomberg 
Businessweek, April 17, 2020. 
Dalibor Rohac, “Europe Needs an Alexander Hamilton, Not More Budget Hawks,” Foreign 
Policy, April 16, 2020. 
Simon Clark and Ben Dummett, “Coronavirus Accelerates European Efforts to Block Foreign 
Takeovers,” Wall Street Journal, April 10, 2020. 
Luke McGee, “The EU Has Bungled Its Response to Coronavirus and It Might Never Fully 
Recover,” CNN, April 10, 2020. 
by Tom Rogan, “Coronavirus Bailout Lays Bare European Union Nationalist Divisions,” 
Washington Examiner, April 10, 2020. 
Samuel Volkin, “Covid-19 and a Splintered European Union,” Hub (Johns Hopkins University), 
April 10, 2020. 
Oliver Wiseman, “Will We Meet Again? The Covid-19 Crisis Is Testing European Unity to the 
Breaking Point,” City Journal, April 8, 2020. 
Heather A. Conley, “An Eroding European Union,” Center for Strategic and International Studies 
(CSIS), April 6, 2020. 
Katya Adler, “Coronavirus Outbreak Eats Into EU Unity,” BBC, April 3, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Katharina Konarek, “COVID-19—A Make-It or Break-It Moment for the European Union,” The 
Hill, April 3, 2020. 
Kevin Allison, “A COVID-19 test for the European Union,” Gzero Media, March 31, 2020. 
Definition of, and Budgeting for, U.S. National Security 
Anca Agachi, “The Miner’s Canary: COVID-19 and the Rise of Non-Traditional Security 
Threats,” Defense One, May 16, 2020. 
Joseph Marks, “The Cybersecurity 202: Security Pros Form Alliance to Help Hospitals Facing 
Hacking Threats During Pandemic,” Washington Post, May 4, 2020. 
Greg Barbaccia, “The Coronavirus Pandemic Will Force a Paradigm Shift in the U.S. Intelligence 
Community,” National Interest, April 23, 2020. 
Kori Schake, “A New Org Chart Won’t Stop the Next Pandemic,” Bloomberg, April 22, 2020. 
Rachel Olney, “How Will the Pandemic Affect National Security Innovation?” War on the Rocks, 
April 21, 2020. 
Christopher Woody, “After Coronavirus, the US Needs to Worry about a ‘7th domain’ of Warfare, 
Top Navy Commander in Europe Says,” Business Insider, April 17, 2020. 
David E. Sanger, “Analysis: Will Pandemic Make Trump Rethink National Security?” New York 
Times, April 15, 2020. 
Benjamin Jensen, “When Systems Fail: What Pandemics and Cyberspace Tell Us About the 
Future of National Security,” War on the Rocks, April 9, 2020. 
Christopher Preble, “How will COVID-19 Change US National Security Strategy?” Responsible 
Statecraft, April 8, 2020. 
Glenn S. Gerstell and Michael Morell, “Four Ways U.S. Intelligence Efforts Should Change in the 
Wake of the Coronavirus Pandemic,” Washington Post, April 7, 2020. 
Oona A. Hathaway, “After COVID-19, We Need to Redefine ‘National Security,’ The Post-9/11 
Era Is Over,” Slate, April 7, 2020. 
Zachery Tyson Brown, “America’s National Security Software Needs an Upgrade, The Outdated 
U.S. Security Apparatus Was Completely Unprepared for the Coronavirus Pandemic,” Foreign 
Policy, April 6, 2020. 
Ben Rhodes, “The 9/11 Era Is Over, The Coronavirus Pandemic and a Chapter of History That 
Should Have Expired Long Ago,” Atlantic, April 6, 2020. 
Gregory D. Koblentz and Michael Hunzeker, “National Security in the Age of Pandemics,” 
Defense One, April 3, 2020. 
Nahal Toosi, “Coronavirus Rattles America’s National Security Priesthood,” Politico Pro, March 
29, 2020. 
Joseph S. Nye, Jr., “COVID-19’s Painful Lesson about Strategy and Power,” War on the Rocks, 
March 26, 2020. 
Gary J. Schmitt, “National Security and the Pandemic of 2020,” American Interest, March 20, 
2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
U.S. Defense Strategy, Defense Budget, and Military Operations 
Courtney Albon, “AFWIC deputy: Air Force Needs New NDS Implementation Plan in Light of 
COVID-19,” Inside Defense, May 27, 2020. 
Eric Lofgren, “Will Defense Budgets Remain ‘Sticky’ After the COVID-19 Pandemic?” Defense 
News, May 26, 2020. 
Bradley Bowman, “Don’t Use COVID As Excuse to Slash Defense Spending,” Breaking Defense, 
May 20, 2020. 
Missy Ryan, “Military Faces Another Potential Coronavirus Toll: Budget Cuts,” Washington Post, 
May 15, 2020. 
Robert Burns, “Bulging Deficits May Threaten Prized Pentagon Arms Projects,” Associated 
Press, May 12, 2020. 
Loren Thompson, “Think You Know Where Defense Spending Is Headed After Coronavirus? 
Guess Again,” Forbes, May 12, 2020. 
Michael E. O’Hanlon, “From the Pentagon’s ‘4+1’ threat matrix, to ‘4+1 times 2,’” Brookings 
Institution, May 11, 2020. 
Steven Pifer, “Weapons, Opportunity Costs, COVID19 and Avoiding Nuclear War,” National 
Interest, May 11, 2020. 
Bryan Clark and Dan Platt, “The Post-Pandemic Military Will Need to Improvise,” Defense One, 
May 8, 2020. 
Susan Montoya Bryan (Associated Press), “US Must Move Ahead with Work on Nukes, Says 
Nuclear Security Boss,” Defense News, May 6, 2020. 
Leo Shane III, “No Extra Money for Defense Amid Coronavirus Crisis, Think Tank Argues,” 
Military Times, May 6, 2020. 
Hal Brands, “Can a Broke America Fight a Cold War With China? The Coronavirus Has United 
Americans Against Beijing’s Aggressions, But It Will Also Devastate the Pentagon Budget,” 
Bloomberg, May 5, 2020. 
Rebeccah L. Heinrichs, “Expand Missile Defenses During the Pandemic, Don’t Cut Them,” 
Defense News, May 5, 2020. 
Fred Kaplan, “Now Is the Time to Cut the Defense Budget,” Slate, May 5, 2020. 
Paul McLeary, “Old Weapons Under Fire As COVID Debt Rises,” Breaking Defense, May 5, 
2020. 
Aaron Mehta, “Esper: Flat Budget Could Speed Cutting of Legacy Programs,” Defense News, 
May 5, 2020. 
John M. Donnelly, “US military poised for post-pandemic shift,” CQ (Congressional Quarterly), 
May 4, 2020. 
Ben Werner, “SECDEF Esper Preparing For Future Defense Spending Cuts,” USNI News, May 4, 
2020. 
Rebecca Kheel, “Defense Budget Brawl Looms After Pandemic,” The Hill, May 3, 2020. 
Anrea Howard, “The Pandemic and America’s Response to Future Bioweapons,” War on the 
Rocks, May 1, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Paul McLeary, “Pentagon Wary Of Adversaries Buying Defense Firms Amid Economic Crisis,” 
Breaking Defense, April 30, 2020. 
Ben Wolfgang, “U.S. Military Ramps Up Counterterrorism Operations in Africa Amid 
Pandemic,” Washington Times, April 29, 2020. 
David Barno and Nora Bensahel, “Five Ways the U.S. Military Will Change After the Pandemic,” 
War on the Rocks, April 28, 2020. 
Theresa Hitchens, “DoD Budget Cuts Likely As $4 Trillion Deficit Looms,” Breaking Defense, 
April 27, 2020. 
Walter Russell Mead, “The Century of Bioweapons,” Wall Street Journal, April 27, 2020. 
Connor O’Brien, “Defense Boosters Fire Warning Shots over Budget Cuts Due to Pandemic,” 
Politico Pro, April 24, 2020. 
Natasha Bertrand, Daniel Lippman, and Lara Seligman, “Officials Probe the Threat of a 
Coronavirus Bioweapon,” Politico Pro, April 23, 2020. 
William D. Hartung, “Now Isn’t the Time to Push for Nuclear Modernization,” Defense News, 
April 21, 2020. 
Loren Thompson, “How Coronavirus Could Permanently Transform The U.S. Military,” Forbes, 
April 20, 2020. 
Todd Harrison, “DoD Must Identify Its ‘Crown Jewels’ in Preparation for Fiscal Uncertainty,” 
Defense News, April 15, 2020. 
Michael J. Mazarr, “Toward a New Theory of Power Projection,” War on the Rocks, April 15, 
2020. 
Robert Burns, “Military Sees No Quick Exit From ‘New World’ of Coronavirus,” Associated 
Press, April 14, 2020. 
Tony Bertuca, “Global Pandemic Threatens to Hobble National Defense Strategy,” Inside 
Defense, April 13, 2020. 
David Ignatius, “The Coronavirus Is Already Reshaping Defense Strategies,” Washington Post, 
April 9, 2020. 
Daniel L. Davis, “Coronavirus Means No More Money for Forever Wars,” National Interest, 
April 7, 2020. 
Harrison Schramm, Kevin A. Chlan, Peter Kouretsos, COVID-19, Analysis and Policy 
Implications, Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, 2020 (released April 7, 2020), 31 
pp. 
Jason Sherman, “Analyst: Pandemic Will Squeeze Defense Spending As Nation’s Focus Shifts to 
Health Care,” Inside Defense, April 6, 2020. 
Stratfor Worldview, “Will the Coronavirus Ruin Countries’ Ability to Wage War?” National 
Interest, April 5, 2020. 
James G. Foggo III, “Germs: The Seventh Domain of Warfare,” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, 
April 2020. 
David Barno and Nora Bensahel, “After the Pandemic: America and National Security in a 
Changed World,” War on the Rocks, March 31, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Max Boot, “Covid-19 is Killing Off Our Traditional Notions of National Defense,” Washington 
Post, March 31, 2020. 
Jim Thomas, “A Blueprint for Rebuilding America’s Military After the Coronavirus,” National 
Interest, March 28, 2020. 
Doug Bandow, “Now’s The Time To Become A Truly ‘America First’ Military, With Coronavirus 
Killing the Economy, We Can No Longer Afford to Project Power Everywhere,” American 
Conservative, March 26, 2020. 
Doug Bandow, “How the Coronavirus Shows North Korea Doesn’t Matter That Much to 
America,” National Interest, March 25, 2020. 
Doug Bandow, “Coronavirus Means America Is Really Broke. Trump Should Get the Hell Out of 
Syria,” National Interest, March 22, 2020. 
U.S. Foreign Assistance and International Debt Relief 
Stephanie Segel, “International Financial Institutions Step Up, but Debt Sustainability Looms 
Large for Future Support,” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), May 21, 2020. 
Joel Gehrke, “Fighting China with Foreign Aid: USAID Becomes a Critical Tool in Battle for 
World Influence,” Washington Examiner, May 10, 2020. 
Michael H. Fuchs, Alexandra Schmitt, and Haneul Lee, “Foreign Aid is Critical to Stopping the 
Coronavirus,” National Interest, May 3, 2020. 
Daniel F. Runde, Conor M. Savoy, and Shannon McKeown, “Covid-19 Has Consequences for 
U.S. Foreign Aid and Global Leadership,” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), 
May 1, 2020. 
James Kynge and Sun Yu, “China Faces Wave of Calls for Debt Relief on ‘Belt and Road’ 
Projects,” Financial Times, April 30, 2020. 
Charles Holmes, Anthony Lake, and Witney Schneidman, “It’s Time to Help Africa Fight the 
Virus, The Continent Is Ripe for a Public Health Disaster, and Western Powers Must Step in to 
Prevent Another Global Catastrophe,” Foreign Policy, April 29, 2020. 
Department of State, “The United States Continues Leadership in the Global COVID-19 
Response With More Than $270 Million in Additional U.S. Foreign Assistance,” press statement, 
Michael R. Pompeo, Secretary of State, April 22, 2020. 
Matthew Lee, “Virus Pandemic Collides with Trump’s Disdain for Foreign Aid,” Associated 
Press, April 17, 2020. 
Adam Tooze, “A Global Pandemic Bailout Was Coming—Until America Stopped It,” Foreign 
Policy, April 17, 2020. 
Editorial Board, “Even as Rich Countries Reel, It’s Imperative to Help Emerging Markets,” 
Washington Post, April 16, 2020. 
Dayo Israel, “Unless Canceled, Africa’s Debt Burden Will Cause COVID-19 to Kill Millions,” 
Washington Examiner, April 16, 2020. 
Cara Anna and Aya Batrawy, “Richest Countries Agree to Freeze Poorer Nations’ Debt,” 
Associated Press, April 15, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Nahal Toosi, “Trump Hobbles Foreign Aid as Coronavirus Rips Around the World, Confusion at 
the Top Has Crippled USAID at a Critical Time for the Global Battle Against the Pandemic,” 
Politico, April 15, 2020. 
Josh Zumbrun, “G-7 Countries Support Debt Relief for Poorest Countries If Joined by Full G-
20,” Wall Street Journal, April 14, 2020. 
Robbie Gramer, “Outgoing USAID Chief Says Pandemic Underscores Importance of Foreign 
Aid,” Foreign Policy, April 13, 2020. 
Josh Rogin, “The Pandemic Means the Trump Administration Must Stop Mistreating USAID,” 
Washington Post, April 9, 2020. 
Josh Rogin, “America’s $2 Trillion Coronavirus Stimulus Package Ignores the Rest of the 
World,” Washington Post, March 26, 2020. 
Non-state Actors 
Audrey Wilson, “Goodbye, Government. Hello, Mafia. From Insurgent Groups to Charities, a 
Range of Nongovernmental Organizations Are Stepping In to Respond to the Coronavirus 
Crisis,” Foreign Policy, May 22, 2020. 
Ryan Browne, “ISIS Seeks to Exploit Pandemic to Mount Resurgence in Iraq and Syria,” CNN, 
May 8, 2020. 
Robert Muggah, “The Pandemic Has Triggered Dramatic Shifts in the Global Criminal 
Underworld,” Foreign Policy, May 8, 2020. 
Ashley Jackson, “For the Taliban, the Pandemic Is a Ladder,” Foreign Policy, May 6, 2020. 
Brandon Prins, “Why Coronavirus May Lead to More Piracy,” National Interest, May 6, 2020. 
Emilia Columbo and Marielle Harris, “Extremist Groups Stepping up Operations during the 
Covid-19 Outbreak in Sub-Saharan Africa,” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), 
May 1, 2020. 
Lydia Khalil, “COVID-19 and America’s Counter-Terrorism Response,” War on the Rocks, May 
1, 2020. 
Luke Baker, “Militants, Fringe Groups Exploiting COVID-19, Warns EU Anti-Terrorism Chief,” 
Reuters, April 30, 2020. 
Joseph Hincks, “With the World Busy Fighting COVID-19, Could ISIS Mount a Resurgence?” 
Time, April 29, 2020. 
Luis Fajardo, “Coronavirus: Latin American Crime Gangs Adapt to Pandemic,” BBC, April 22, 
2020. 
Raffaello Pantucci, “After the Coronavirus, Terrorism Won’t Be the Same,” Foreign Policy, April 
22, 2020. 
Valentina Di Donato and Tim Lister, “The Mafia Is Poised to Exploit Coronavirus, and Not Just 
in Italy,” CNN, April 19, 2020. 
Jim Mustian and Jake Bleiberg, “‘Cartels Are Scrambling’: Virus Snarls Global Drug Trade,” 
Associated Press, April 19, 2020. 
Colum Lynch, “How Trump and Putin Weakened U.N. Bid for a Global Cease-Fire, U.S. Officials 
Worry That Counterterrorism Operations Will Be Constrained,” Foreign Policy, April 17, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Seth J. Frantzman, “Iran Regime, ISIS and Other Extremists Exploit Coronavirus to Wreak 
Havoc,” Jerusalem Post, April 16, 2020. 
Kevin Sieff, Susannah George, and Kareem Fahim, “Now Joining the Fight Against Coronavirus: 
The World’s Armed Rebels, Drug Cartels and Gangs,” Washington Post, April 14, 2020. 
Souad Mekhennet, “Far-Right and Radical Islamist Groups Are Exploiting Coronavirus Turmoil,” 
Washington Post, April 10, 2020. 
Yonah Jeremy Bob, “Coronavirus Economic Impact Could Block Iran from Funding Terror—
INSS,” Jerusalem Post, April 7, 2020. 
Vanda Felbab-Brown, “What Coronavirus Means for Online Fraud, Forced Sex, Drug Smuggling 
and Wildlife Trafficking,” Lawfare, April 3, 2020. 
Cara Anna, “Extremists See Global Chaos from Virus As An Opportunity,” Associated Press, 
April 2, 2020. 
Stratfor Worldview, “Coronavirus Could Lead To Lots of This in the Near Future,” National 
Interest, March 22, 2020. (The article discusses potential actions by non-state actors.) 
U.S. Attention to International Issues Other than COVID-19 
James Jay Carafano, “Amid Coronavirus, Global Challenges Remain for U.S.—Keep Eye on 
These 3 Hot Spots,” Heritage Foundation, May 20, 2020. 
Kathrin Hille, “Taiwan Fears Uptick in Military Threat from China in Wake of Coronavirus,” 
Financial Times, May 18, 2020. 
Steven Erlanger, “Will the Coronavirus Crisis Trump the Climate Crisis?” New York Times, May 
9 (updated May 11), 2020. 
Steve Mollman, “China’s South China Sea Plan Unfolds Regardless of the Coronavirus,” Quartz, 
May 9, 2020. 
Arjun Kapur, “Scotland Launched an Invasion During the Black Death. Does History Tell China 
to Attack Taiwan?” National Interest, May 2, 2020. 
Con Coughlin, “China Exploiting the Coronavirus Pandemic to Expand in Asia,” Gatestone 
Institute, April 30, 2020. 
Corinne Redfern, “The Pandemic’s Hidden Human Trafficking Crisis, The Coronavirus Has 
Created More People Vulnerable to Exploitation by Traffickers—and Revealed the World’s 
Unpreparedness to Protect Them,” Foreign Policy, April 30, 2020. 
Paul Haenle, “Security Concerns in Asia-Pacific Escalate Amid Coronavirus Scramble, While the 
Trump Administration Is Consumed with the Coronavirus, China and North Korea Are Seizing 
the Moment for Strategic Advantage,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, April 29, 
2020. 
Bertil Lintner, “Time May Be Ripe for China to Invade Taiwan, Pandemic Has Left a US Security 
Vacuum Around the Self-Governing Island China Has Oft-Vowed to ‘Reincorporate’ with the 
Mainland,” Asia Times, April 28, 2020. 
Victor Davis Hanson, “Pandemic Only 1 of America’s Security Concerns,” Daily Signal, April 
23, 2020. 
Emily Estelle, “Eyes on the Other Global Crises,” Real Clear World, April 21, 2020. 
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COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
Gordon Lubold and Dion Nissenbaum, “With Trump Facing Virus Crisis, U.S. Warns Rivals Not 
to Seek Advantage,” Wall Street Journal, April 20, 2020. 
Ellen Mitchell, “Foreign Powers Test US Defenses Amid Coronavirus Pandemic,” The Hill, April 
19, 2020. 
Karen DeYoung, “Foreign Policy Challenges Persist for a Distracted U.S. in the Midst of 
Pandemic,” Washington Post, April 10, 2020. 
Sylvie Lanteaume (Agence France-Presse), “Hit by Virus, Pentagon Warns Enemies: Don’t Test 
Us,” Yahoo News, April 10, 2020. 
“With the world distracted, China intimidates Taiwan,” Economist, April 8, 2020. (This article 
does not list an author.) 
Fred Kaplan, “The Coronavirus Hasn’t Stopped Trump From Undermining Our National 
Security,” Slate, March 26, 2020. 
Role of Congress 
Daniel P. Vajdich, “Congress Has Been AWOL on U.S. Coronavirus Diplomacy, The Invisibility 
and Silence of Congress Is Another Reason for America’s Shocking Abdication of Global 
Leadership,” Foreign Policy, May 22, 2020. 
George Ingram and Jeffrey L. Sturchio, “How Congress Can Address the International 
Dimensions of the COVID-19 Response,” Brookings Institution, April 15, 2020. 
Rob Berschinski and Benjamin Haas, “How Congress Can Save Lives, Protect Rights, and Exert 
U.S. Leadership Globally in Response to Coronavirus,” Just Security, April 8, 2020. 
Robbie Gramer and Jack Detsch, “Pandemic Stymies Congressional Check on Trump’s Foreign 
Policy,” Foreign Policy, April 8, 2020. 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Ronald O'Rourke 
  Michael Moodie 
Specialist in Naval Affairs 
Assistant Director and Senior Specialist in Foreign 
    
Affairs, Defense and Trade 
    
Kathleen J. McInnis 
   
Specialist in International Security 
    
Congressional Research Service 
37 
COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment 
 
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
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under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not 
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Congressional Research Service  
R46336 · VERSION 5 · UPDATED 
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