Asia

The Changing of the Guard

The view that sometime during this century a “changing of the guard” will occur, when China will displace the United States in much the same way as America did Britain, is widely held. It unites liberals and conservatives, optimists and pessimists, most of whom accept the proposition that “the East is back”, with China leading the pack. The debate is over when the shift will happen and what a world that currently bears an American stamp will look like after… more

Rajan Menon | The National Interest | January/February 2008

Learning From Korea: Innovative Social Investment Strategies for Future Generations

Social investment policies – policies that pursue both economic and social development – are increasingly shaping strategies for growth in both developed and developing nations. In January 2007, the Republic of Korea implemented a series of innovative policies, with a particular emphasis on investments in children. Informed by similar policies in the UK, the US and Canada, the Korean Minister of Health and Welfare, His Excellency Simin Rhyu, has now established a Child Development Accounts (CDAs) policy. These… more

03/26/2007 - 3:00pm
03/26/2007 - 5:00pm

North Korea Isn't Our Problem

The United States is bogged down in what appears to be an unwinnable war in Iraq; it is facing very unpleasant options in regard to neighboring Iran’s nuclear program; senior NATO officers say that the situation in Afghanistan is deteriorating fast; in the former Soviet Union, Georgia and Russia are moving toward military confrontation, with the U.S. seemingly unable to restrain either; in large swaths of Latin America, new nationalist and populist movements are challenging U.S. interests.

And now the totalitarian… more

Anatol Lieven | Los Angeles Times | October 12, 2006

More Will Follow N. Korea and 'Go Nuclear'

And then there were nine. Nine nuclear powers, that is, including North Korea. There will be more.

Four points to make:

First, there will be much hand-wringing here in the United States about what the American president -- Bill Clinton, George W. Bush -- did or did not do to stop the North Koreans from ramping up their nuclear program over the past dozen years or so.

Yes, it is true the Clinton administration did not bargain effectively with the North Koreans. And,… more

James Pinkerton | Newsday | October 10, 2006

Book Launch: Shutting out the Sun

Michael Zielenziger's new book, Shutting Out the Sun, offers an intelligent, insightful look into the economic disquiet and disturbing social trends afflicting Japan. Though once on the verge of eclipsing the United States as the world’s dominant economic power, Japan failed to recover fully from the economic collapse of the early 1990s and now confronts a Japanese society and economy jeopardized by disaffected youth.

Exploring the reasons behind Japan’s status as the industrialized nation with the highest suicide rate and the… more

10/05/2006 - 12:15pm
10/05/2006 - 1:45pm

Parag Khanna

Parag Khanna Senior Research Fellow, American Strategy Program and Director, Global Governance Initiative

David Friedman

David Friedman Former Senior Fellow

David Friedman was a New America Senior Fellow from March 2000 through March 2007.Friedman is an attorney, political scientist, economic development specialist, author, and columnist. In addition to his law degree, he holds a Ph.D. from MIT in international politics, where he won an award for the “Best… more

Barry C. Lynn

Barry C. Lynn Senior Research Fellow, Economic Growth Program

Steven Clemons

Steven Clemons Senior Fellow and Director, American Strategy Program

Steven Clemons directs the American Strategy Program at the New America Foundation, which aims to promote a new American internationalism that combines a tough-minded realism about America's interests in the world with a pragmatic idealism about the kind of world order best suited to America's democratic way of life. He… more

Korean to a Tee

South Korea's 7-3 victory over the United States in the World Baseball Classic on Tuesday wasn't the only sporting news that made front-page headlines in Seoul last week. On the same day that the South Korean team "spanked the U.S." -- as the English-language edition of the Korea Times put it -- the nation's prime minister was forced to resign after it was revealed that he had played golf with some shady businessmen on a national holiday that coincided with… more