Global Security Newswire

US General Reserves Right to Use Force, Even Nuclear, in Response to Cyber Attack | Global Security Newswire

"They call this 'calculated ambiguity,' but it's just stupid," said Jeffrey Lewis, who directs the Nuclear Strategy and Nonproliferation Initiative at the New America Foundation. Longtime US policy discourages government leaders from either overtly ...
Jeffrey Lewis | May 12, 2009

Experts Question Significance of Iranian Breakout Option | Global Security Newswire

Countries should instead concentrate on the potential for Iran to build and operate a secret uranium enrichment facility, said Jeffrey Lewis of the New America Foundation. Iran could acquire a nuclear deterrent without actually building a weapon, ...
Jeffrey Lewis | February 25, 2009

Science Continues to Have Key Nonproliferation Role, Experts Say | Global Security Newswire

... issues of arms control, said speaker Jeffrey Lewis, head of the Nuclear Strategy and Nonproliferation Initiative at the New America Foundation. ...
Jeffrey Lewis | February 18, 2009

US General Eyes Nuclear Weapon Improvements | Global Security Newswire

"It's pointless," said Jeffrey Lewis, director of the New America Foundation's Nuclear Strategy and Nonproliferation Initiative. "No one has a hit-to-kill ...
Jeffrey Lewis | December 19, 2008

Jeffrey Lewis in Global Security News

The White House announced yesterday that President George W. Bush has decided to reduce the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile by an additional 15 percent by 2012.

The new retirements come on top of those already undertaken over the past three years. In 2004, Bush said the United States would cut its arsenal — which includes a vast number of warheads in storage — in half by 2012.

However, the nuclear agency has retired weapons much more swiftly than anticipated and… more

Jeffrey Lewis | December 19, 2007

Global Security Newswire Quotes Jeffrey Lewis on Red Teaming

The Domestic Nuclear Detection Office, a division within DHS, is hoping that by employing independent experts it can garner a glimpse of the current nuclear and radiological detection approach from a terrorist's perspective...In effect, study group members might be asked to play terrorist, probing for information and physically testing the U.S. detection web. Homeland Security officials are looking for an "accurate emulation of potential threat actors, their likely source materials and courses of action," according to the DHS… more

Jeffrey Lewis | March 26, 2007