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The Revenge of Geography: What the Map Tells Us About Coming Conflicts and the Battle Against Fate
Author(s): Robert KaplanType of Publication: BookDate: 09/11/2012In The Revenge of Geography: What the Map Tells Us About Coming Conflicts and the Battle Against Fate, CNAS Non-Resident Senior Fellow and Stratfor Chief Geopolitical Analyst Robert D. Kaplan builds on the insights, discoveries and theories of great geographers and geopolitical thinkers of the near and distant past to look back at critical pivots in history and then forward at the evolving global scene.
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Influence for Sale? China’s Trade, Investment and Assistance Policies in Southeast Asia
Author(s): Shanthi KalathilType of Publication: Flashpoints BulletinDate: 09/05/2012In Influence for Sale? China's Trade, Investment and Assistance Policies in Southeast Asia, author Shanthi Kalathil argues that while China's significant investment in Southeast Asia has improved relations with Vietnam and other Southeast Asian neighbors in some ways, it has proved less effective than is commonly perceived. Kalathil contends that China’s development projects have often alienated local populations, and its nationalistic rhetoric over the South China Sea has increasingly strained its relations with other South China Sea claimants.
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The Sansha Garrison: China’s Deliberate Escalation in the South China Sea
Author(s):Type of Publication: Flashpoints BulletinDate: 09/05/2012In The Sansha Garrison: China's Deliberate Escalation in the South China Sea, CNAS Fellow Oriana Skylar Mastro argues that China is conducting a coordinated and deliberate campaign of coercive diplomacy in the South China Sea. Mastro discusses how China's recent decision to build a military garrison in the city of Sansha challenges two key aspects of the conventional wisdom in Washington about China’s South China Sea strategy: that China’s assertive behavior results from actions taken by the civilian and military agencies independently of the central government and that China has been moderating its policies toward the South China Sea since 2009.
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Don't Forget About the East China Sea
Author(s): Michael AuslinType of Publication: Flashpoints BulletinDate: 05/03/2012The East China Sea may be the most strategic location in all of Asia. While the media and policymakers have paid considerable attention to the geopolitical significance of the South China Sea, the East China Sea deserves equal attention. Like the South China Sea, it is rife with contested territorial claims, larger military buildups among the principal players of the region and a geopolitical significance that impinges even more directly on long-standing U.S. security commitments.
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Defending the Philippines: Military Modernization and the Challenges Ahead
Author(s): Richard D. Fisher, Jr.Type of Publication: Flashpoints BulletinDate: 05/03/2012China’s increasing belligerence in the South China Sea has led the new president of the Philippines, Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III, to make the most credible policy commitment in decades to improve Philippine military capabilities. China can now threaten the ability of the Philippines to access resources located in its exclusive economic zone.
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The China Challenge: Military, Economic and Energy Choices Facing the U.S.-Japan Alliance
Type of Publication: ReportDate: 04/27/2012The U.S.-Japan alliance is the cornerstone of peace and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region, but it will confront difficult challenges between now and 2025 that could greatly affect its future. In The China Challenge: Military, Economic and Energy Choices Facing the U.S.-Japan Alliance, released in advance of Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda’s visit to the United States, Dr. Patrick Cronin, Paul Giarra, Zachary Hosford and Daniel Katz argue that the United States and Japan must address a host of defense, economic and energy security issues over the next decade if the alliance is to maintain its power as China continues to rise.
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Security at Sea: The Case for Ratifying the Law of the Sea Convention
Author(s): Will RogersType of Publication: Policy BriefDate: 04/25/2012While the United States has protected its maritime interests without ratifying the Law of the Sea Convention (LOSC), the rise of modern navies and unconventional security threats are making this approach increasingly risky and will imperil U.S. national security interests. The U.S. Senate must act now to protect the nation's maritime interests by approving LOSC, argues Will Rogers in Security at Sea: The Case for Ratifying the Law of the Sea Convention.
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Dr. Patrick Cronin Testifies before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs on North Korea after Kim Jong-il
Author(s): Dr. Patrick M. CroninType of Publication: Congressional TestimonyDate: 04/18/2012On April 18th, CNAS Senior Director of the Asia-Pacific Security Program Dr. Patrick Cronin testified before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on the nature of North Korea under Kim Jong-un.
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Vital Venture: Economic Engagement of North Korea and the Kaesong Industrial Complex
Author(s): Dr. Patrick M. CroninType of Publication: ReportDate: 03/01/2012The diplomatic breakthrough with North Korea this week re-establishes a baseline for future negotiations, but it has done nothing to fundamentally alter underlying security and economic problems on the peninsula, argues Dr. Patrick Cronin, Senior Advisor and Senior Director of the Asia-Pacific Security Program at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS). In Vital Venture: Economic Engagement of North Korea and the Kaesong Industrial Complex, released today by CNAS, Dr. Cronin contends that the diplomatic accord leaves in place an unsettling set of economic realities and trends on the peninsula and that "the United States must undertake a systematic strategic review of North Korea policy."
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China’s Global Quest for Resources and Implications for the United States
Author(s): Dr. Patrick M. CroninType of Publication: Congressional TestimonyDate: 01/26/2012On January 26th, Dr. Patrick M. Cronin, CNAS Senior Advisor and Director of the Asia-Pacific Security Program, testified before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. He discussed the subject of China's approach to managing natural resources and its implications for U.S. national security.
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