experts
Li Bin
Senior Fellow, Nuclear Policy Program and Asia Program

about


Li Bin is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Li Bin was a senior fellow working jointly in the Nuclear Policy Program and the Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. A physicist and expert on nuclear disarmament, his research focuses on China’s nuclear and arms control policy and on U.S.-Chinese nuclear relations.

Li is also a professor of international relations at Tsinghua University. He previously directed the arms control division at the Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics, where he also served as executive director of the Program for Science and National Security Studies. Li was a Social Science Research Council–MacArthur Foundation Peace and Security Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Princeton University.

In 1996, Li joined the Chinese delegation on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty negotiations. 

Li is the author of Arms Control Theories and Analysis and co-editor of Strategy and Security: A Technical View. He has also been published in numerous academic journals, including the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Arms Control Today, Jane’s Intelligence Review, and Science & Global Security.

Li also serves on the boards of several international journals, including Science & Global Security, Nonproliferation Review, and China Security

 


education
PhD, Physics, China Academy of Engineering Physics, MS, BS, Physics, Peking University
languages
Chinese, English

All work from Li Bin

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54 Results
paper
China-U.S. Cyber-Nuclear C3 Stability

Cyber threats to nuclear command, control, and communications systems (NC3) attract increasing concerns. Carnegie and partners have developed a platform of unclassified knowledge to enable U.S.-China engagement on this issue.

  • +4
· April 8, 2021
event
Security Challenges and Arms Control: European Lessons for Asia
December 23, 2019

International security and stability are facing new challenges with the increase of great power competition and the termination of key arms control treaties, which threaten to destroy the world’s existing cooperative security institutions.

In the Media
China’s Thinking on MIRVs

China has three basic paths towards strengthening its nuclear retaliatory capability: It can strengthen the survivability of its nuclear weapons, increase their numbers, or strengthen the capability of each warhead to penetrate missile defense systems.

· October 9, 2019
The Paper
event
Missile Defense and U.S.-China Strategic Stability
July 10, 2019

Given the difficulty of achieving the complete denuclearization of North Korea in the near term, the United States and its allies in the Asia-Pacific have strong incentives to continue building their missile defense capabilities.

  • +2
event
Establishing an International Code of Conduct for Biological Scientists
October 31, 2018

International efforts to mitigate potential threats from biotechnologies, such as the Biological Weapons Convention, have so far proven to be of limited effectiveness preventing their misuse.

  • +3
  • Li Bin
  • Yang Yi
  • Elad Popovich
  • Yang Xiao
  • Xue Yang
  • Zhang Weiwen
article
Reducing the Risks of Nuclear Entanglement

With the threat of nuclear war growing, China, Russia, and the United States should not wait until political relations improve before making efforts to manage new technologies.

· September 12, 2018
In the Media
Which Road Map Should China Promote when Building a Peace Mechanism for the Korean Peninsula?

The international community must design a fair and reasonable North Korea denuclearization road map that is politically sustainable, technically operable, and that can protect the long-term interests of all concerned parties.

· September 3, 2018
World Affairs
event
Developments in U.S. Missile Defense Policy and Their Regional Impact
July 17, 2018

While the United States argues that its deployment of the THAAD missile defense system in South Korea is necessary to counter the nuclear threat from North Korea, Chinese experts worry that U.S. missile defense assets in the region could undermine China’s strategic nuclear deterrent capability.

  • +2
commentary
Foreign Policy Experts on the Singapore Summit and What Comes Next

Despite the pageantry of the Singapore summit, the outcomes remain uncertain.

· June 14, 2018
event
Denuclearizing North Korea: Practicalities and Politics
May 1, 2018

In the aftermath of the inter-Korean summit on April 27, and ahead of planned U.S.-North Korea talks, please join Carnegie for a deep dive on the practicalities and politics of denuclearizing North Korea.

  • +6