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As China seeks a more balanced diplomatic approach after decades of enhanced exchanges with Western powers, it should pay more attention to its Asian neighbors.
China’s radical economic reforms could bring new prosperity to hundreds of millions—if Xi Jinping can successfully navigate the bumps ahead.
There is a pattern with second terms that begins with Theodore Roosevelt and is fairly consistent: presidents usually only make significant achievements in foreign policy, where they have a free hand.
2014 promises to be an extremely active year for foreign policy news.
The Haqqani network may have become a liability for Islamabad at a time when it is attempting to demonstrate to the West and Karzai that it should be part of any peace talks with the Taliban.
China’s decision to supply Pakistan with further power reactors has raised concerns that Beijing is breaching nuclear trade rules.
The West must brace itself for the possibility that the oligarchic system itself, with its deep roots in Russian political culture, will outlive the regime of President Vladimir V. Putin.
The contest between Iran and Saudi Arabia is manifesting itself vividly in Syria, and now Lebanon is rising as the next geopolitical battleground for the two regional powers.
A steep but orderly reduction in GDP growth is likely to be the best evidence that Beijing is forcefully implementing reforms, and that China is preparing itself over the decade to regain growth on a healthier long-term basis.
Transatlantic relations may well be another long-term victim of the war in Afghanistan.