Aaron Menenberg is an analyst at Praescient Analytics and the Technology Fellow at the Institute for the Study of War. He is also a graduate student in international relations at The Maxwell School of Syracuse University. Previously he has worked at The Hudson Institute on sovereignty issues, for the Israeli Ministry of Defense, and at the IBM Corporation. The views expressed are his own. He welcomes questions and comments at menenbergaaron@gmail.com.
Personal Updates by Aaron Menenberg
- The Future of Defense: The US Wants to Spend $526 billion. What About the Dutch?
- Quick Pitch: More Big Data Analysis for Energy
- Middle East/North Africa Part 2: Violence, Poor Governance, and a Social Contract Void
- Making Sense of the Middle East’s New Dynamics
- Being Smart: A New Energy Plan for A New America
Aaron Menenberg on Twitter
Recent Blog Posts by Aaron Menenberg
- The Future of Defense: The US Wants to Spend $526 billion. What About the Dutch?
- Quick Pitch: More Big Data Analysis for Energy
- Middle East/North Africa Part 2: Violence, Poor Governance, and a Social Contract Void
- Making Sense of the Middle East’s New Dynamics
- Being Smart: A New Energy Plan for A New America
- The Problem of (Mis)Scaling Challenges
- Psychologically Profiling Larry Summers and Timothy Geithner: Who makes the better Fed Chair?
- For 2013, Worry About Europe
- Some Friday Charts: Changing Global Economic Power and Population
- Five Questions for the Presidential Candidates that Re-link Economics with Foreign Policy
- Making Sense of Georgia’s Elections: Politics and Global Energy
- Why Energy Demand Grows with the Economy
- Our Agriculture and Energy Policies: A New Malthusian Catastrophe?
- A Psychological Profile of Ben Bernanke
- Wray Has the Economics, but the Nations Have Their State
- Energy Subsidies in Perspective
- Let’s Get Real: Energy Independence is an Unrealistic and Misleading Myth
- The EMU Crisis is a Battle of Nationalism Versus Transnationalism, not Economic Prescriptions
- The EMU Crisis is a Battle of Nationalism Versus Transnationalism, not Economic Prescriptions















