Conflict Prevention

Taiwan Report Authors Spoke at Woodrow Wilson Center

Overview

Piin-Fen Kok, director of EWI’s China, East Asia, and United States program, and David J. Firestein, Perot fellow and vice president for EWI’s Strategic Trust-Building Initiative and Track 2 Diplomacy discussed Threading the Needle: Proposals for U.S. and Chinese Actions on Arms Sales to Taiwan, a policy report on U.S. arms sales to Taiwan. 

The event took place at the Woodrow Wilson Center, in cooperation with the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States. Speakers included Richard C. Bush, director of Brookings Center for East Asian Policy Studies, and Zhou Qi, senior fellow and director of American Politics at the Institute of American Studies (CASS). 

Read the event report

Photo Credit: Michael Renner (2010)

Live Web Stream Event: Book Presentation by Angela Stent

Overview

On February 12, Professor Angela E. Stent will come to EWI's New York office to lead a discussion on her new book, The Limits of Partnership: U.S.-Russian Relations in the Twenty-First Century

The Limits of Partnership offers a comprehensive narrative on U.S.-Russian relations since the Soviet collapse and on future challenges in the bilateral relationship. Stent calls for a fundamental reassessment of the principles and practices that drive U.S.-Russian relations. She offers a path forward to meet the urgent challenges facing both countries. 

Stent is professor of government and foreign service and director of the Center for Eurasian, Russian and East European Studies at Georgetown University. She is also the author of Russia and Germany Reborn: Unification, the Soviet Collapse, and the New Europe. 

Photo Credit: Center for the Study of Europe (2004)

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"Ms. Stent tells the story clearly and dispassionately," writes The Economist. Click here for the full book review.   

Click here to read Ms. Stent's latest article in The New York TImes, "At Sochi, a High Bar for Putin." 

Click here to watch a live web stream of the event

 

The Genesis of EWI

The EastWest Institute was born in the East. It was begun over a beer in a Chinese restaurant with a modest proposal from Co-Founder Ira Wallach.

"If you could do anything to make the world a safer place for my grandchildren, John, what would you do?" At the time of this unexpected conversation in 1981, the realities of a deepening Cold War had set in and the possibility of ending the Cold War was amongst the most distant of dreams. The détente period was slowing down and the rhetoric on both sides was heating up. The Third World was a frequent battlefield for the two superpowers and new instabilities from Afghanistan to Mozambique were dangerously destabilizing the East-West balance of power. Other forces, both sectarian and nationalistic, were appearing to endanger the peace. In Iran, the revolutionary turmoil of 1979 encouraged the ruinous Iraqi invasion. Lebanon was engulfed in violence, and Beirut was one of the most infamous of cities on earth.

Life in Lebanon in the early 1980s was not for the weak at heart. Incoming phone calls could generate deadly explosions and casual drives down winding dirt roads turned into fatal ambushes. The bullets of professional assassins killed their targets, and stray bullets killed at random. To John Edwin Mroz, a young scholar who devoted much of his time to the Middle East working on UN peacekeeping and peacebuilding efforts, the horrors of Lebanon provided an urgent sense of mission, and this adversity forged the character of EWI.

A headline in a newspaper in Ceaucescu's Romania posed the theoretical question, "Who are You Really, John Mroz?" The inference was that he was an agent of a neighboring country. Mistrustful minds for years have sought to understand the "real agenda" behind the EastWest Institute. During the course of countless interviews in Europe and the U.S., John Mroz and EWI were labeled "Polish partisans," "Hungarian nationalists," or supporters of other nationalities that the speaker viewed as opponents. Some questioned whether John and EWI were agents of the U.S. government or a furtive subordinate of the USSR. It seemed impossible that a group of European and American citizens could come together and set out to build confidence and promote fundamental change.

What lies behind the "real motives" of EWI however, can be found in the tragic cityscape of war-torn Lebanon. Here the ambitions and aspirations of the EastWest Institute were ultimately forged. Of the wide range of potential responses to this human tragedy, the Institute conceived by John Mroz and Ira Wallach that day in Amman was born on the road less traveled. A decision was made soon after that afternoon in Jordan to engage the struggle directly, fighting back for peace and to give a chance for the people and nations in the region to know freedom and prosperity. This has set the agenda of EWI, and after 30 years of working in a world in transformation, this cause remains as sacred today as when the Institute was born.

Leaders, Soldiers, Hackers and Spies

With the New Year approaching, several EWI staff and fellows offered their lists of what they believed were the most significant events of 2013.

Piin-Fen Kok, Director, China, East Asia and United States Program

Xi’s Country

The leadership transition is completed with the state leadership reshuffle and Xi Jinping’s assumption of the presidency. Xi moves decisively to consolidate power and control. The 18th CPC central committee holds its third plenum and announces the most comprehensive set of economic, political and social reforms since 1978.

These various developments will have ramifications for China’s domestic and foreign policies in the coming years, as Xi is expected to remain in power until 2022. 

America’s Image Takes a Beating

The U.S. government shuts down for the first time in decades over a debt/deficit impasse, prompting calls from China for “a de-Americanized world.” Edward Snowden's revelations affect U.S. relations with its allies and transform the nature of international political discourse and diplomacy on cyber hacking, especially with China.

The moral high ground of the world’s superpower has been eroded—it’s shown to the world that it cannot keep its own house in order, and it now needs a new approach to lecturing others about cyber intrusions.

Whatever Happened to the Axis of Evil...?

A new deal is reached with Iran, part of a breakthrough in relations with the United States. Meanwhile, North Korea conducts another nuclear test, and Kim Jong-Un executes his uncle.

The world will watch with bated breath to see how these developments will affect regional and nuclear security—for different reasons.

Maritime Security Tensions in East Asia

China-Japan relations sink to a new low. Warplanes circle the skies in China’s ADIZ (Air Defense Identification Zone). U.S. and Chinese warships narrowly avoid a collision in the South China Sea.

The risk of military conflict, whether inadvertent or deliberate, is real, and the U.S. rebalancing strategy is tested, as is China’s claim of peaceful intentions. This is also raises the question whether Japan will finally be compelled to acknowledge a dispute over the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands.

Syria’s Chemical Weapons Deal

The deal stemmed a dreadful scenario of chemical war within Syria and spotlighted Russian diplomacy. The civil war, though, within the country hasn’t stopped.

 

Greg Austin, Professorial Fellow

U.S. Demand on China to Stop Cyber Espionage

In February, the United States laid down an unusual public demand on China to curtail its cyber espionage against American targets.  Within a short time, it also imposed retaliatory measures on associated Chinese corporations by barring their products from government procurement contracts for selected federal departments. This came after President Obama criticized cyber “enemies,” which was a thinly veiled broadside at China. The adversarial positioning by the United States is understandable at one level, but it marked yet one more serious step downwards in the bilateral relationship arising from unchecked militarization of cyberspace.    

Snowden Revelations   

While the information itself was no surprise to professional diplomats, the Edward Snowden leaks represented the most serious U.S. intelligence breach in several decades and dealt a serious blow to its credibility, not least its position on a free and open Internet. Allied intelligence agencies, especially in the United Kingdom, were outraged by what they saw as American incompetence in compromising some of their most sensitive national secrets, some 52,000 top secret documents. The world suddenly felt like “We are all American targets now.” United States preeminence in cyber espionage was confirmed, if there was ever any doubt. The damage will take years to repair. 

Syrian Chemical Weapons Attack and Subsequent Diplomacy 

The events in Syria are momentous. First, the Assad regime was directly implicated in what was a war crime, but no major state has yet taken any significant steps against it as a result. Second, Russia knocked normally nimble-footed Western diplomats off their stride by quickly brokering a chemical disarmament deal with the Syrians. Third, the diplomacy coincided with a clear shift in Western attitudes to the opposition in Syria as concerns rose about the influence of the extremist militias. 

Iran Agreement with 5+1 on Nuclear Issues

After more than ten years of threats by the United States and Israel that a military attack on Iran might be needed to prevent it from acquiring nuclear weapons, diplomacy appears to have succeeded in forging a preliminary breakthrough. The outcome resulted from a historic shift by the United States and its negotiating partners from a policy of “mostly sticks, some carrots” to one of “let’s just talk in good faith about the result we both need.”

Naval Arms Race Emerges between Japan and China 

Japan’s long term defense plan and the associated naval procurement decisions set that country on a course for expansion of its navy, calibrated against Chinese naval forces. The decisions mark the culmination of two decades of rising concern in Japan about China’s defense modernization, combined with the return to power in December 2102 of an unapologetically assertive Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe. Japan’s decisions have been influenced by China’s escalation of rhetoric and activities around the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands, but they do not depend on that. 

 

Kevin Ching, Davis Fellow

Snowden NSA Leaks 

The scale and scope of activities by intelligence agencies across the globe was a staggering revelation, the full impact of which is yet to be seen. It has propelled a public debate on the balance between privacy and safety to the fore, and also has significant repercussions for U.S. tech companies.

China’s Growing Assertiveness

Territorial disputes continue to flare in the South and East China Seas, as China’s neighbors argue that such aggression belies Beijing’s claims of a peaceful rise. The situation has come to a head with Beijing’s surprising declaration of an ADIZ that covers a string of islands hotly contested by Japan and China.

Shale Gas Revolution

Technological advances have allowed the U.S. to exploit its shale gas reserves, making it the world’s largest producer of natural gas. This has had a massive effect on the U.S. energy market, with reverberating economic and geopolitical implications in Asia, the Middle East and the rest of the world.

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General Jones Elected Chairman of the American-Turkish Council

EWI board member General James L. Jones (USMC ret.) will replace retired U.S. Ambassador and former Deputy Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage as the new chairman of the American-Turkish Council (ATC). 

"Corporate members of the ATC, both American and Turkish, welcome General Jones and look forward to working with him to strengthen business, trade and investment relations, as well as the national security and foreign policy relationships between the US and Turkey, two proven allies and friends," said a statement released by ATC earlier this week. 

Jones's service with ATC begins on January 1, 2014. 

 

Source
Source: 
Trend News Agency

Dr. Beate Maeder-Metcalf Spoke at High Level Conference on Afghanistan and Central Asia

Overview

EWI’s Vice President and Director of the Regional Security Program Dr. Beate Maeder-Metcalf spoke at a High Level Conference on "Afghanistan and Central Asia: Prospects and Challenges after Withdrawal of NATO/ISAF Forces" on December 18. The conference—organized by the Committee on Foreign Affairs, in association with the Delegation for relations with Afghanistan and the Delegation to Central Asia—was held at the European Parliament in Brussels. 

See the full transcript of Dr. Maeder-Metcalf's remarks from the session on regional security and stability.   

5th U.S.-China Sanya Dialogue

Overview

As part of the ongoing U.S.-China Sanya Dialogue Process, organized by the EastWest Institute (EWI) in partnership with the China Association for International Friendly Contact (CAIFC), a delegation of retired U.S. flag officers visited China for meetings with Chinese military leaders and retired generals. Topics discussed included Northeast Asia, Taiwan and cybersecurity.

Read the event report

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