Foreign Policy Blogs

Rising Powers

Obama’s Speech to the Muslim World

Obama’s Speech to the Muslim World

What is missing in this speech is anything Churchillian. What is missing is realism…for example, a statement that the U.S. is determined to prevent the acquisition of nuclear weapons by unstable or radical regimes, be they Muslim or not.

read more

Chinese Humming

Chinese Humming

While China is beginning to go green and planning strict fuel economy standards, a Chinese company reached a preliminary agreement to buy the Hummer brand from General Motors. Just as the Hummer came to symbolize GM’s fall, could the sale be a sign of a shifting global balance of power? Photo from Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP/Getty Images.

read more

Incredible India! The Branding Campaign

Incredible India!  The Branding Campaign

India’s Business Standard has an article today by Kishore Singh giving an review of Amitabh Kant’s new book entitled “Branding India: An Incredible Story“.  The book analyzes India’s success in its Incredible India! campaign.  Since its launch in 2002, Incredible India has transformed “a contrarian diversity into a contemporary brand to sell India overseas as […]

read more

Implications of China's rise in Australia

Implications of China's rise in Australia

The New York Times today provides an excellent analysis of China’s growing role as an economic powerhouse, both regionally and globally.  As the first of a series dealing with China’s rise and the geostrategic implications, Michael Wines writes a compelling piece discussing the prowess of 3 Chinese companies aiming to take a hold on $22 […]

read more

BRIC Holdings

BRIC Holdings

While all of the BRICs – Brazil, Russia, India and China – have increased their holdings of foreign exchange reserves since 2000, China is easily the largest holder of US financial assets. Brad W Setser, fellow for geoeconomics at the Council on Foreign Relations, and Arpana Pandey, a research associate at the Council, write that […]

read more

GDP and Rising Powers

GDP and Rising Powers

Today the strategic forecasting firm Stratfor released a comparison report dealing with the “Geography of Recession“.  I’ll let you subscribe to the actual post, but the main gist of it is that the US is far better off than its competitors at weathering the recession.  What’s more, the US compares far favorably to China, and […]

read more

China Update…

China Update…

U.S. Treasury Secretary Geithner appears to have had a nice meeting with Chinese leaders today. Smoothing over any ruffled feathers of the recent past. Stressing cooperation. Setting it up nicely for a little Obama administration “good cop, bad cop” routine, starting with a meeting in late July, with Secretary of State Clinton playing the role of the baton-wielding heavy.

read more

Geithner in China

Geithner in China

A long-time China hand, Mandarin speaker, East Asia major at SAIS, son of an East Asia expert who opened the Ford Foundation’s office in Beijing, U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner is in China to jumpstart the Obama administration’s “strategic and economic dialogue.”  This effort puts a stamp of change on Bush’s “strategic economic dialogue,” the so-called G-2, or regular meetings between […]

read more

What's India got to do with it?

What's India got to do with it?

A lot. India has come under increased fire by international human rights groups for its lack of action during Sri Lanka’s war against the Tamil Tiger rebels (LTTE).  Some have even called India complicit in the killing of 20,000 Tamil civilians in Sri Lankan due to its provision of arms to the Sri Lankan government, […]

read more

Superpower Lessons

Superpower Lessons

Arvind Subramanian, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and Center for Global Development, published a good commentary in the Business Standard arguing that India can learn from China’s strong public finances –  a sound fiscal position is crucial for establishing international influence. “The lesson for superpower-aspiring India from superpower-arriving China is simple: […]

read more

India’s Arrival?

India’s Arrival?

“One can date precisely China’s debut as a great power,” writes Fareed Zakaria in the latest issue of Newsweek. “It was the evening of Aug. 8, 2008 – the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics. The event perfectly symbolized China’s rise, a spectacular and expensive feat of mass organization, directed by the country’s highly competent […]

read more

The Debate – China or America?

Who will emerge stronger after the crisis? China or the United States? The New America Foundation and Foreign Policy hosted a debate on Tuesday about how the Great Recession will alter the global balance of power. “Which economy is poised to recover from the deepest recession since the 1930s? Who will be on top? Who […]

read more

Iran’s Reach

Iran’s Reach

The presidents of Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan met in Tehran on Sunday to discuss shared challenges and how the countries could work together to address regional issues. President Hamid Karzai, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and President Asif Ali Zardari agreed to jointly tackle extremism, terrorism and drug trafficking. Although largely devoid of specific measures, the summit […]

read more

You knew this already: China is the key to North Korea

You knew this already: China is the key to North Korea

North Korea performed a nuclear test this weekend which, according to various seismic tests, amounted to a blast of somewhere between 4 and 20 kilotons (possibly larger than the US’ bombing of Hiroshima in 1945).  The significance of the test cannot be discounted, as Pyongyang’s 2006 blast was a mere 1 kt.  With increased missile […]

read more

Number of the Week: 206

Number of the Week: 206

206. On Friday, Manmohan Singh was sworn in as India’s prime minister. Mr. Singh is the first prime minister since Jawaharlal Nehru to return to office after serving a full five-year term. The Congress Party unexpectedly romped to victory by a big margin in the world’s largest exercise in democracy. Instead of an unwieldy and […]

read more