

A Luncheon and Discussion:
on
"Is War Coming to the Arctic?"
with
Dr. Thomas Rotnem
Associate Director of the School of Government and International Affairs, and Professor of Political Science, Kennesaw State University
Climate change is thinning the Arctic ice, promising to create a northwest passage for international trade and reigniting the competition with Russia, China, and other countries over access to the region's mineral resources. The historic ties of Russia and China and their Arctic ambitions reveal that the Arctic is likely to be an arena for future strategic competition. Furthermore, Greenland has become a focus of the U.S. and other countries because of its strategic location as well as its mineral wealth.
Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine has temporarily bolstered the West's position in the Arctic, as previously neutral Finland and Sweden joined NATO. Finland's accession into NATO not only increased the NATO-Russia land border by over 650 percent, and moved the defense alliance a mere 250 miles from St. Petersburg, but it also contributed to creating a divided Arctic, where nearly half belongs to NATO while the remaining half is Russian territory.
Russia already operates a third more Arctic military bases than the U.S. and its NATO allies. Now Putin is moving soldiers, icebreakers, warships, and submarines, many of them with nuclear capabilities, to the region, as well as conducting Arctic drills that test hypersonic missiles capable of evading American defense.
JOIN US:
Date: Wednesday, August 27th, 2025
Time: 11:30 a.m. - 1.30 p.m.
Venue: Capital City Club (downtown)
7 John Portman Blvd NW
Atlanta, GA 30303
Parking: Complimentary valet parking is available
You Must Register to Attend
Registration Closes Friday, August 22nd, at 10 am

Cancellation Policy: If you need to cancel, please do so not later than 48 hours before the event. ACIR is charged for your meal, so no refund can be provided.
Meet Dr. Thomas Rotnem
Thomas Rotnem is the Associate Director of the School of Government and International Affairs, and Professor of Political Science at Kennesaw State University (KSU). At KSU, he teaches courses on Comparative Politics, Russian Politics and Culture, Russian Foreign Policy, Comparative Democratization, Arctic Policy, and Politics and Security in a Changing Environment.
For a little over a decade, he's been studying and writing about Russia's policy interests in its Arctic realm, as well as its evolving relationship with China in the region. He has received grants or fellowships from the Social Science Research Council, IREX, the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies, the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, the U.S. Department of Education, the U.S. Department of State, the National Science Foundation, and the Fulbright Organization (for lectureships or scholarships in the Russian Federation and Latvia). Most recently, he has worked as a co-principle investigator on a NSF Grant studying climate change's impact upon economies in Greenland and Iceland.


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Georgia Institute of Technology
Kennesaw State University
University of North Georgia
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Photo credit: NATO Innovation hubj
China Cognitive Warfare
with
Josh Baughman, US National Defense University
Cognitive Warfare is seen as its own domain in modern warfare alongside the four military domains defined by their environment (land, maritime, air and space) and the cyber domain connects them all. Cognitive Warfare operates on a global stage as we are all digitally connected and uses information technology and the tools, machines, networks and systems to seek out it's target: intelligence.
China, as a strategic competitor to NATO, describes Cognitive Warfare as the use of public opinion, psychological operations, and legal influence to achieve victory. Combat psychology has significant impact on the warfighter's ability to function with a focus on recording facial information, emotional changes and psychological states of soldiers to determine their combat status. Outside of the battlefield, influence can also affect law, rule-of-order and civil constructs.
JOIN US:
Date: Thursday, May 23, 2024
Time: 11:30 a.m. - 1.30 p.m.
Venue: Capital City Club (downtown)
7 John Portman Blvd NW
Atlanta, GA 30303
Parking: Complimentary valet parking is available
Cancellation Policy: If you need to cancel, please do so not later than 48 hours before the event. ACIR is charged for your meal, so no refund can be provided.