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Vanderbilt Institute of National Security to release GoLaxy documents on Wicked Problems Lab website
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 8, 2025 Contact: Kathleen Clark Director of Communications Vanderbilt Institute of National Security kathleen.clark@vanderbilt.edu 615-343-6328 NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The Vanderbilt Institute of National Security will release nearly 400 pages of primary source documents at 6 a.m. CT today that formed the… Read MoreSep. 9, 2025
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Quantum Potential Podcast Episode 10: Securing the 21st century with Ret. Gen. Paul Nakasone
In this episode of Quantum Potential, Gen. Nakasone, former NSA director, founding director of Vanderbilt’s Institute of National Security, Distinguished Research Professor of Engineering Science and Management, and special advisor to the chancellor, j... Read MoreJul. 1, 2025
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Restoring Stability in a New Nuclear Era: Wicked Problems Lab Releases New Policy Paper on Modern Deterrence
The Vanderbilt Institute of National Security’s Wicked Problems Lab has released a new policy paper that calls for a bold rethinking of America’s nuclear posture in response to today’s fast-moving technological threats. Titled “Restoring Nuclear Deterrence in the Modern Age,” the paper examines how the long-standing doctrine of Mutually Assured… Read MoreJun. 24, 2025
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Sen. Blackburn: U.S. must maintain tech advantage over adversaries
U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn praised Vanderbilt University for convening leading voices in military, intelligence, and technology during a fireside chat at the 2025 Summit on Modern Conflict and Emerging Threats. “I am thrilled that Vanderbilt is doing this,” playing a key role in advancing national… Read MoreMay. 9, 2025
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AI is a strategic necessity in modern intelligence work, national security
Artificial intelligence is no longer just a tool—it’s a strategic imperative, according to Lakshmi Raman, director of the CIA’s Office of Artificial Intelligence. During her keynote address and fireside chat at Vanderbilt’s fourth annual Summit on Modern Conflict and Emerging Threats, Raman described how the CIA is adapting to… Read MoreMay. 9, 2025
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U.S. Rep. Mark Green warns of cyber threats, offers solutions and challenges students to lead
Drawing on his military background and role as chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, U.S. Rep. Mark Green offered a frank assessment of artificial intelligence and its implications for the future of national security during the 2025 Vanderbilt Summit on Modern Conflict and Emerging Threats. … Read MoreMay. 9, 2025
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Panels explore AI, security and the role of human judgment
Over two days of expert panels at the 2025 Vanderbilt Summit on Modern Conflict and Emerging Threats, one theme emerged as the clearest unifying thread: As AI systems become more powerful and more autonomous, the role of human judgment has never been more crucial. Across discussions on… Read MoreMay. 9, 2025
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The next great power struggle: control over chips and computing
The race to control advanced semiconductor technology will shape the future of national security, economic competitiveness and geopolitical influence, according to historian and policy expert Chris Miller, who delivered a keynote address at Vanderbilt University during the fourth annual Summit on Modern Conflict and Emerging Threats. Miller,… Read MoreMay. 9, 2025
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Sam Altman on future AI: ‘Do we shape it or let it shape us?’
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT—and perhaps the most prominent figure shaping the future of artificial intelligence in the U.S.—joined the fourth annual Vanderbilt Summit on Modern Conflict and Emerging Threats for a wide-ranging virtual conversation on the national security… Read MoreMay. 9, 2025
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‘We must lead’: Diermeier calls AI a defining challenge for American leadership
Chancellor Daniel Diermeier opened the fourth annual Vanderbilt Summit on Modern Conflict and Emerging Threats with a call for bold, collaborative leadership to meet the unprecedented challenges posed by artificial intelligence. “We are living through a moment of extraordinary promise—and extraordinary peril,” Diermeier said. “That… Read MoreMay. 9, 2025