Foreign Policy Blogs

Tag Archives: Tibet

On Enes Kanter and Politics in Sport

On Enes Kanter and Politics in Sport

  Enes Kanter has reemerged on the political stage. The eleven year NBA veteran made waves after wearing a pair of speakers expressing support for Tibetan independence. The game between Kanter’s Boston Celtics and the New York Knicks was being broadcast around the world, until the feed was abruptly cut off for Chinese consumers by […]

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Targeting China’s Core Interests Is A Fool’s Errand

Targeting China’s Core Interests Is A Fool’s Errand

The U.S.’ great power competition with China is intensifying on a number of fronts simultaneously, namely trade, security, and human rights. Current U.S. pressure on China through the Hong Kong protests actually manages to intertwine all three areas concurrently. However, as with the origins of current U.S.-Russian tensions being traced back decades to several factors, […]

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Will Modi’s Visit to the Border Threaten Chinese Investment in India?

Will Modi’s Visit to the Border Threaten Chinese Investment in India?

Last Friday, Beijing reacted strongly to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to India’s disputed border area with China, to mark the 28th anniversary of the establishment of Arunachal Pradesh as an Indian state.

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China Blasts U.S. over Torture Report

China Blasts U.S. over Torture Report

On Tuesday, the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee released its findings of a 6,200 page report detailing a secret CIA program of detention and torture implemented under President George W. Bush.

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Cultural Cleansing with Chinese Characteristics?

Cultural Cleansing with Chinese Characteristics?

In the remote northwestern autonomous region of Xinjiang, China authorities are certainly being exhaustive in their attempts to stem a spike in the long-running activity of Islamic militants. Recent attempts have involved the use of drones employed to locate, capture and kill suspected Islamic militants in the region, as well as restrictions being placed on the practice of Islam and the wearing of beards and veils in public.

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Moscow Takes Ukraine, Beijing Takes Mongolia?

Moscow Takes Ukraine, Beijing Takes Mongolia?

map: ChinaSmack Tensions escalated in eastern Ukraine on Thursday, as Ukrainian forces killed up to five pro-Moscow separatist rebels, and Russia launched army drills near the border in response, raising fears its troops would invade. The Ukrainian action took place to recapture territory from the rebels, who have seized swaths of eastern Ukraine since April […]

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Angry Panda: Obama Meets with Dalai Lama, China Throws a Temper Tantrum

Angry Panda: Obama Meets with Dalai Lama, China Throws a Temper Tantrum

President Obama met informally with exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama at the White House on February 21. The meeting took place in defiance of warnings from Beijing that it would “grossly interfere in the internal affairs of China, seriously violate norms governing international relations and severely impair China-U.S. relations.” As expected, the meeting […]

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Xi Dumps Deng for Mao

Xi Dumps Deng for Mao

Police detained this supporter of Xu Zhiyong who had gathered with other activists outside the court Human Rights Watch accused China on Tuesday of failing to meet its people’s demands for political reform and for its pursuit of anti-corruption activists — despite its declared crackdown on graft.  The New York based organization accused the Chinese […]

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Sino-Indian Relations Full of Contradictions

Sino-Indian Relations Full of Contradictions

The following post is based on an address I delivered at the Shanghai Maritime Strategy Research Center two weeks ago. The punditry gods were smiling when Beijing and New Delhi declared 2012 as the Year of Sino-Indian Friendship.  After all, it was a most curious designation, and not just because 2006 had received the same […]

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Delhi Disgraces Itself (Again)

Delhi Disgraces Itself (Again)

India repeatedly undermines the vitality of its democratic example The past week brought fresh evidence of just how deeply India abounds in contradiction.  On the one hand, New Delhi won international plaudits for standing up for democratic norms in Asia by voting at the United Nations Human Rights Council to investigate alleged war crimes in neighboring Sri Lanka. […]

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Fires of Despair in Tibet

Fires of Despair in Tibet

It is roughly 1644 miles between Tibet and Ho Chi Minh City, where 48 years ago Buddhist monks burst into flames in protest against the U.S. backed government. Those actions also burst into the public eye through newspaper photos and television reports, igniting a different kind of flame –a slow flame of questioning and then […]

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Anxious Tiger, Leering Dragon: The Indian and Chinese Border Part III – Conclusion

The Future This dispute could be settled with a classic “land swap”, such as China’s Western claim  for India’s eastern one;  which is already the international accepted status quo.  In fact China has already proposed this twice, once in the the 1950s and again in the early 1980s.   Russia struck a similar deal with China […]

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Anxious Tiger, Leering Dragon: The Indian and Chinese Border Part II

Anxious Tiger, Leering Dragon: The Indian and Chinese Border Part II

The Past Indo – Sino Border In this second installment of our three part series on the Indo-Sino border conflict, we examine the origin of the 190 years old dispute, in order to fleshing-out the historical twist and turns  that have brought these two rising powers to their present situation. This conflict was engendered by […]

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Anxious Tiger, Leering Dragon: The Indian and Chinese Border Part I

Anxious Tiger, Leering Dragon: The Indian and Chinese Border Part I

Over the past six months, there has been much of focus in the international media on the territorial disputes between China and its neighbors in the East and South China seas.  However, China has territorial disputes along most of its borders. Although the United States has injected itself into the former, the dispute between China and […]

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China, Climate and Trade

If you know me or have been reading this blog with any regularity, you know I’m a skeptic.  Not about climate change but about China.  I made an analysis several years back that, in retrospect, seems mistaken.  I perceived that the economic and political pressures of the liberal democracies would push and pull China toward […]

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