In The News

Peter Beck April 27, 2006
In 1910, Japan invaded Korea, colonizing the country for 35 years and attempting to obliterate its culture. Nationalism, fed by historic grievances, lingers today. In the second part of this three-part series, Peter Beck of the International Crisis Group analyzes the troubled relationship between Japan and South Korea, who are major trading partners, yet continue to clash over territorial...
Joergen Oerstroem Moeller April 26, 2006
The world today must confront a new economic policy conundrum: national governments doubting the benefits of cross-border mergers and acquisitions on the one hand, and the forces of economic globalization driving such partnerships on the other. The battle, already waged in Europe and the US, has now migrated to Asia. As global industry restructures, three major factors frame the conflict over...
Nicholas Watt April 26, 2006
The lucrative gas reserves in Turkmenistan attract the EU to such an extent that parliamentary committees are prepared to disregard the harsh regime of President Niyazov and many human-rights abuses. In contrast, the EU has banned Belarussian leaders from traveling for vote-rigging their country’s elections, a less serious crime than human-rights abuses. Coincidentally, Belarus does not have oil...
Wenran Jiang April 25, 2006
In recent history, Asian neighbors such as China, Japan and South Korea have transformed from traditional foes to complementary trading partners. But this three-part series explores how competition for natural resources rekindles historical grievances, fueling nationalism and confrontation. Rising tension over the waters demonstrate how increased interdependence brought about by globalization may...
Daniel Sneider April 25, 2006
The inevitability of China’s rise has led its Asian neighbors to perform “fine balancing” acts, with the question of how to respond to China’s growth remaining high on every agenda. Even countries that have been historically at odds with China – such as Japan and Vietnam – worry about the threat, but must cooperate with the second largest economy in the world in terms of purchasing power. Like...
Craig Whitlock April 24, 2006
Osama bin Laden insists that the US War on Terrorism is really a War on Islam and warns his followers by audiotape to prepare for long conflict. The tape contradicts his previous message from January that called for a long-term truce with the US for withdrawal from Iraq. In the April tape, bin Laden urges followers to head to Sudan and fight with peacekeepers, suggesting that the West wants to...
Martin Jaques April 24, 2006
With globalization, most anticipate an inter-connected world with greater understanding of multiple cultures more than ever before. Author Martin Jacques argues that this assumption is at odds with the tone of globalization, based on a “one-size-fits-all” model of western cultural imperialism. Whereas European colonialism included exporting self-defined values of civilization, it did not strive...