Peter Dutton

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Peter Dutton

Peter Dutton

@peter_dutton

Yale Law School - Paul Tsai China Center // NYU - US-Asia Law Institute // Harvard Fairbank Center for China Studies

Boston, MA Se unió Nisan 2013
523 Siguiendo15.2K Seguidores
Peter Dutton
Peter Dutton@peter_dutton·
Great kit!
Andrew Erickson 艾立信@AndrewSErickson

New! 20 #Chinese (中文) #Naval/#Maritime #Law-Related Translations Published! @NavalWarCollege/@ChinaMaritime Studies Institute Quarterly Review 1.3 (February 2026)—The Legal Struggle for #China’s Maritime Power: Strategy, Sovereignty, & Enforcement digital-commons.usnwc.edu/cmsi-quarterly… Previous issues curated here: bit.ly/CMSIQuarterlyR… From CMSI Director CAPT @ChrisHSharman, @USNavy (Ret.): China Military Maritime Watchers: How does maritime law become an instrument of power & influence? The China Maritime Studies Institute (CMSI) is pleased to announce the publication of our latest CMSI Quarterly Review – Translation Special Edition. This volume brings together 20 archived CMSI translations to trace how the People’s Republic of China (PRC) built & operationalized a robust legal architecture in support of its strategic transition from a large maritime country to a maritime power. Drawn from official and unofficial PRC journals, these articles reveal how maritime law has been used to legitimize expansive extraterritorial claims, establish legal “red lines,” & shape competitive behavior at sea. Rather than reading history backward, the volume treats each article as a snapshot in time, capturing evolving PRC thinking—from China’s role in international maritime negotiations to the modern employment of law as an operational instrument. As PRC maritime disputes intensify, understanding how China arrived at its legal positions—& how it intends to use them—matters more than ever. We hope this collection of archived translations proves a valuable resource for scholars, warfighters, & policymakers navigating the Indo-Pacific’s increasingly contested legal terrain. @JamesKraska/@julianku/@BonnieGlaser/@graham_euan/@djag2/@BuchananLiz/@justinburke/@RUMLAE

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Peter Dutton retuiteado
Andrew Erickson 艾立信
Andrew Erickson 艾立信@AndrewSErickson·
New! 20 #Chinese (中文) #Naval/#Maritime #Law-Related Translations Published! @NavalWarCollege/@ChinaMaritime Studies Institute Quarterly Review 1.3 (February 2026)—The Legal Struggle for #China’s Maritime Power: Strategy, Sovereignty, & Enforcement digital-commons.usnwc.edu/cmsi-quarterly… Previous issues curated here: bit.ly/CMSIQuarterlyR… From CMSI Director CAPT @ChrisHSharman, @USNavy (Ret.): China Military Maritime Watchers: How does maritime law become an instrument of power & influence? The China Maritime Studies Institute (CMSI) is pleased to announce the publication of our latest CMSI Quarterly Review – Translation Special Edition. This volume brings together 20 archived CMSI translations to trace how the People’s Republic of China (PRC) built & operationalized a robust legal architecture in support of its strategic transition from a large maritime country to a maritime power. Drawn from official and unofficial PRC journals, these articles reveal how maritime law has been used to legitimize expansive extraterritorial claims, establish legal “red lines,” & shape competitive behavior at sea. Rather than reading history backward, the volume treats each article as a snapshot in time, capturing evolving PRC thinking—from China’s role in international maritime negotiations to the modern employment of law as an operational instrument. As PRC maritime disputes intensify, understanding how China arrived at its legal positions—& how it intends to use them—matters more than ever. We hope this collection of archived translations proves a valuable resource for scholars, warfighters, & policymakers navigating the Indo-Pacific’s increasingly contested legal terrain. @JamesKraska/@julianku/@BonnieGlaser/@graham_euan/@djag2/@BuchananLiz/@justinburke/@RUMLAE
Andrew Erickson 艾立信 tweet mediaAndrew Erickson 艾立信 tweet mediaAndrew Erickson 艾立信 tweet mediaAndrew Erickson 艾立信 tweet media
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Peter Dutton
Peter Dutton@peter_dutton·
If at first you don’t succeed….
DK🇺🇸🦅🇺🇸@1Nicdar

130 schools said no. He led the losingest program in college football history to a national championship anyway. Fernando Mendoza was a 2-star recruit from Miami. He tried to walk on at his hometown school. They passed. So did FIU. So did FAU. So did everyone else. At 17, he was sitting in his bedroom, crying over a silent recruiting inbox—after driving to 18 camps with his dad and sending highlights to more than 100 programs. Not one FBS offer. His only option? Yale. No scholarship. No NFL path. Everyone told him to be “realistic.” “Know your place.” “Be grateful.” He didn’t listen. Because Mendoza understood something most people miss: The worst outcome isn’t failing. It’s never getting the chance to try. Two weeks before signing day in 2022, his phone rang. Cal needed a body. One offer. Out of 134 schools. He took it. He arrived as the third-string quarterback. Spent a year on the scout team. Lost his first four starts. Got sacked 41 times behind a broken offensive line. Still got up. Every time. Then Cal brought in a transfer instead of building around him. So Mendoza left the only school that had ever said yes. He transferred to Indiana—the losingest program in college football history. People laughed. “Career suicide.” “Graveyard program.” “Nobody wins there.” One coach told him something different: “I’m going to make you the best Fernando Mendoza possible.” That was enough. Mendoza wasn’t just playing for football. His mother has battled multiple sclerosis for 18 years. Before every snap, he thought of her. “My mother is my why.” Indiana went 16–0. Beat six Top-10 teams. Won their first Big Ten title since 1945. Mendoza threw 41 touchdowns. Won the Heisman—first in school history. First Cuban-American to ever do it. Then came the title game. Miami. Near his hometown. Fourth-and-4. Season on the line. Quarterback draw. The kid 134 schools rejected spun through defenders and dove into the end zone. Game over. Indiana—national champions. The losingest program became the best team in America. All because a 17-year-old refused to believe “no” was the end. Rankings don’t decide your ceiling. Gatekeepers don’t write your ending. Being overlooked isn’t a verdict—it’s a starting point. Sometimes all you need is one shot… and the courage to bet on yourself when nobody else will. Don’t quit. Credit: Barclay Mullins

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Peter Dutton
Peter Dutton@peter_dutton·
What a wonderful essay, reminding us of the common humanity we share with all people and cultures.
Andrew Erickson 艾立信@AndrewSErickson

In these terrible but hopeful times, my thoughts are with the people of Iran. Much lies beyond my own expertise, but through research and personal family history I have encountered unmistakable evidence of the depth, sophistication, and humanity of Iranian civilization and society—worth recalling now. The Persian Empire was one of the earliest great continental empires—and the first on such a scale—to become a sustained maritime power. It remains one of the very few land powers in history to successfully become a sea power on a sustained basis—an extraordinary feat. google.com/books/edition/… During the late Cold War, the Shah of Iran—himself an experienced pilot—sought advanced aircraft to counter high-altitude Soviet incursions that violated Iranian airspace. His efforts intensified after Moscow repeatedly rebuffed his appeals for mutual overflight restraint. theaviationgeekclub.com/former-iiaf-to… Amid a competitive U.S. selection process, the Shah chose Grumman’s F-14. youtube.com/watch?v=G-mrFc… As president of Grumman’s aerospace subsidiary beginning in 1972, and its president and chief operating officer starting in 1976, my grandfather oversaw the contracting and delivery of 79 F-14s to Iran. bit.ly/F-14IranSale To support the program, Grumman sent roughly 2,000 employees and their families to Imperial Iranian Air Force Base Khatami, 15 miles north of Isfahan. There, a Grumman-U.S. Navy team trained approximately 80 Iranian pilots and 40-50 radar intercept officers. My grandfather personally ensured that all employees and family members received extensive instruction in Persian language and culture as part of a six-month “trans-cultural” program beginning on 20 January 1975. Years later, while reading related materials, I first encountered Iran’s rich heritage and culture myself. bit.ly/GrummanInIran In 1979, just before I was born, my grandfather was preparing to visit his employees in Iran. What followed in the broader sweep of history is well known. Less widely known is the unreserved kindness that ordinary Iranians showed to the guests in their community even as their own lives were thrown into turmoil. Despite having everything to lose, they remained neighbors in the truest sense of the word to foreigners they would never see again. Local Iranians helped delay the incoming Revolutionary Guards’ focus on the Grumman employees and their families, protecting them long enough for all to reach Tehran’s airport and depart safely aboard aircraft arranged by Grumman. Months later, the personal belongings they had abandoned in haste arrived in Long Island by shipping container, with no valuables missing. My grandfather always credited this humane treatment—and the later return of those effects—to the respect fostered by the cultural training program and reflected in their conduct as guests in Iran. My grandfather knew key Iranian government and industry leaders of the 1970s and was deeply impressed by their expertise. After 1979, he watched as many oil industry specialists relocated to Houston and communications professionals to Los Angeles, where they went on to make major contributions in their new homes. Since 1979, Iranian technical talent has produced some of the world’s earliest anti-ship ballistic missiles, but domestic repression and regional warfare have left Iran far short of its potential. bit.ly/IranASBMs Aggression during the 1981-88 Tanker War proved a disastrous failure. bit.ly/TankerWar Iran’s internationally unique possession of two parallel navies—the Islamic Republic of Iran Navy and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy—underscores the abnormal government-military system imposed by its clerical regime today. frontiersin.org/journals/polit… Yet the sophisticated promise of Iranian culture has by no means been destroyed. It awaits the chance to flourish anew in unshackled freedom. Analysts of regional and military affairs have long emphasized this enduring Iranian sophistication to me. Today, more than ever, I see a groundswell of popular determination and a rising tide of resolve. Iran’s current government, which suppresses a diverse and dynamic society within a sectarian straitjacket, does not reflect the will of its people. Forty-seven years of oppression and injustice have only deepened the damage. Iran should—and can—be far better than this. If someone as distant and tangential as me can witness so much of the goodness inherent in Iranian people, culture, and civilization, I can only imagine what is evident to those truly in the know. At the end of the day, what matters most are Iranians themselves—and their freedom to live good lives of their own in peace, prosperity, and promise. I hope the people of Iran will soon have a government that truly represents them and is worthy of their rich, highly advanced culture and tremendous positive potential.

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Ben Sasse
Ben Sasse@BenSasse·
Friends- This is a tough note to write, but since a bunch of you have started to suspect something, I’ll cut to the chase: Last week I was diagnosed with metastasized, stage-four pancreatic cancer, and am gonna die. Advanced pancreatic is nasty stuff; it’s a death sentence. But I already had a death sentence before last week too — we all do. I’m blessed with amazing siblings and half-a-dozen buddies that are genuinely brothers. As one of them put it, “Sure, you’re on the clock, but we’re all on the clock.” Death is a wicked thief, and the bastard pursues us all. Still, I’ve got less time than I’d prefer. This is hard for someone wired to work and build, but harder still as a husband and a dad. I can’t begin to describe how great my people are. During the past year, as we’d temporarily stepped back from public life and built new family rhythms, Melissa and I have grown even closer — and that on top of three decades of the best friend a man could ever have. Seven months ago, Corrie was commissioned into the Air Force and she’s off at instrument and multi-engine rounds of flight school. Last week, Alex kicked butt graduating from college a semester early even while teaching gen chem, organic, and physics (she’s a freak). This summer, 14-year-old Breck started learning to drive. (Okay, we’ve been driving off-book for six years — but now we’ve got paper to make it street-legal.) I couldn’t be more grateful to constantly get to bear-hug this motley crew of sinners and saints. There’s not a good time to tell your peeps you’re now marching to the beat of a faster drummer — but the season of advent isn’t the worst. As a Christian, the weeks running up to Christmas are a time to orient our hearts toward the hope of what’s to come. Not an abstract hope in fanciful human goodness; not hope in vague hallmark-sappy spirituality; not a bootstrapped hope in our own strength (what foolishness is the evaporating-muscle I once prided myself in). Nope — often we lazily say “hope” when what we mean is “optimism.” To be clear, optimism is great, and it’s absolutely necessary, but it’s insufficient. It’s not the kinda thing that holds up when you tell your daughters you’re not going to walk them down the aisle. Nor telling your mom and pops they’re gonna bury their son. A well-lived life demands more reality — stiffer stuff. That’s why, during advent, even while still walking in darkness, we shout our hope — often properly with a gravelly voice soldiering through tears. Such is the calling of the pilgrim. Those who know ourselves to need a Physician should dang well look forward to enduring beauty and eventual fulfillment. That is, we hope in a real Deliverer — a rescuing God, born at a real time, in a real place. But the eternal city — with foundations and without cancer — is not yet. Remembering Isaiah’s prophecies of what’s to come doesn’t dull the pain of current sufferings. But it does put it in eternity’s perspective: “When we've been there 10,000 years…We've no less days to sing God's praise.” I’ll have more to say. I’m not going down without a fight. One sub-part of God’s grace is found in the jawdropping advances science has made the past few years in immunotherapy and more. Death and dying aren’t the same — the process of dying is still something to be lived. We’re zealously embracing a lot of gallows humor in our house, and I’ve pledged to do my part to run through the irreverent tape. But for now, as our family faces the reality of treatments, but more importantly as we celebrate Christmas, we wish you peace: “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned….For to us a son is given” (Isaiah 9). With great gratitude, and with gravelly-but-hopeful voices, Ben — and the Sasses
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Peter Dutton
Peter Dutton@peter_dutton·
Carrier USS Ford Crosses Atlantic as US Forces Gather Near Venezuela … “The administration has not requested a declaration of war on Venezuela from Congress, and is said to be discussing alternative legal theories that could support regime change-level operations without legislative approval, all related to alleged drug smuggling activity.” maritime-executive.com/article/carrie… #maritime #maritime-news
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Peter Dutton
Peter Dutton@peter_dutton·
PH Interdicts PRC Fishermen ... "Second Thomas Shoal is within the Philippines' 200-NM EEZ boundary...it submerges at high tide and does not constitute land for the purposes of UNCLOS claims...[nonetheless] China claims the reef...as its own." maritime-executive.com/article/philip… #maritime #maritime-news
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Peter Dutton
Peter Dutton@peter_dutton·
NATO Sees Success in its Baltic Anti-Sabotage Mission … “These shippers, these illegal shippers, are aware that they're being watched very closely, and we believe that in itself is a deterrent.” maritime-executive.com/article/nato-s…
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Julian Ku 古舉倫
Julian Ku 古舉倫@julianku·
This sounds like a small ask by China, but it would be a pretty big shift in U.S. policy to go “not supporting” to “opposing” Taiwan independence.
Julian Ku 古舉倫 tweet media
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