US Hegemony and its Perils; the Chinese Optic
To read the whole document, the controls for turning pages and zooming in or out are at the bottom left corner above.
To read the whole document, the controls for turning pages and zooming in or out are at the bottom left corner above.
A Conversation with Lee Hsien Loong, Prime Minister of the Republic of Singapore. Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong says tensions over Taiwan risk leading to a miscalculation between the U.S. and China as both nations step up activity around the island. “I don’t think it’s going …
Image: Karolina Grabowska on Pexels The Acting Editorial Page Editor of the New York Times, Kathleen Kingsbury makes a superb introduction of an Op-Ed by Fu Ying, a government official in China, whom she considers “an important person in China’s government — much more important than her titles convey. She is among the highest-ranking women …
Photo: Kiyoshi Tanno on iStock Antonio Navalón Regardless of who will be elected to sit in the White House next week, from that day on, a political event of special relevance will reshape our closest environment, and that is that the United States is back. Since September 11, 2001, the United States had to pick …
Comments: I think the US is obviously the problem with multilateralism but I disagree with much of his postulates. He is coming from a 20th-century posture regarding multilateralism, and that rested on a ‘Pax Americana’ that is untenable. Much of America’s political discourse concerns government …
Photo by Karolina Grabowska from Pexels The first and the second economic powers in the world, competing for the first place on many fronts, this is one of them: U.S. and China Global Exports and Imports 2019 (in Millions of U.S. Dollars) U.S. Balance on …
Hong Kong and the new National Security Law. IS RATIONAL DISCOURSE POSSIBLE ON THE NEW NATIONAL SECURITY LAW? REFLECTIONS ON HYSTERIA AND THE WESTERN MEDIA’S REACTION TO THE LAW The hysteria in the Western media began in May this year when the Standing …
Laura Ruggeri If twenty years ago someone had predicted a colour revolution in Hong Kong, most political analysts would have laughed. Not because colour revolutions are laughable — their tragic consequences can hardly be laughed off — but because they tend to occur in target …