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With Israeli elections two months away and Obama's second term administration barely beginning to take shape, key factors affecting the bilateral relationship remain highly uncertain.
Even as the currency war between China and the United States recedes, the battle over foreign investment and technology transfer policies will continue to escalate in the coming months.
It is time to move the global climate agenda forward by exploring alternative platforms for collaboration.
The relative political openness brought about by the Arab Spring in some countries provides an opportunity for the emergence of political and social forces that reflect the reality and aspirations of the middle class.
With UN climate talks seemingly losing momentum, China should step up domestic mitigation ambitions, not least because they serve the country’s own interests.
The United States and China must find ways to cooperate if the rebalance of American policy toward Asia is to succeed.
The Obama administration's most important international affairs legacy could well be the restoration of diplomacy to its proper central place in U.S. international policy.
Though Russia’s relations with the West have deteriorated over 2012, it is important for Moscow and the Western countries to “rediscover” each other and to develop a strategic relationship.
The U.S. position on whether India or China has sovereignty over the territory of Arunachal Pradesh will be increasingly important as the rivalry between those two emerging powers grows.
After the recent fighting in Gaza, both Israel and Hamas can point to military successes and limited losses, which could offer a way to escape the cycle of revenge that would have been triggered by the humiliation or defeat of either side.