China Reform Monitor: No. 933
China on soft power offensive in Bangladesh;
Hu meets with KMT leader on sidelines of APEC
China on soft power offensive in Bangladesh;
Hu meets with KMT leader on sidelines of APEC
Ever since the late October release of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s latest report on Iran, the White House has been working overtime to convince the world that it is, in fact, committed to preventing the Islamic Republic from going nuclear. Last month, responding to criticism of his Iran policy from Republican challengers, President Obama argued that the sanctions levied by his Administration to date have had “enormous bite.”
The reality, however, is considerably more modest. While it has publicly pledged its commitment to a serious economic offensive aimed at derailing Iran’s nuclear drive, in practice the White House has done far less than necessary to achieve that objective.
PLA engineers operating multiple projects in Pakistan;
Chinese space-monitoring facility in Australia complete
The Risks Of The Reset
New Start's Dangerous Legacy
The Myth Of U.S.-Russian Missile Defense Cooperation
Weathering The Budgetary Storm
Backing Viktor Bout;
Medvedev struggles to remain relevant
Russia's rampant brain drain;
Return of the Eurasianists
The FSB's dirty tricks;
Return of the czar
The International Atomic Energy Agency’s latest report on Iran’s nuclear program has refocused world attention on the Iranian regime’s relentless pursuit of the bomb and on the global failure thus far to derail it. But a multilateral solution to the Islamic republic’s nuclear ambitions appears to be as elusive as ever, due in no small measure to the stances of its enablers — Russia among them. In recent days, Moscow has publicly rejected the new IAEA findings and argued for renewed diplomacy in response to Iran’s nuclear transgressions.
Wealthy Chinese drawn to emigration, favor Canada and Australia;
PLA loosens standards to attract new recruits
Deteriorating quality of groundwater sparks concerns;
Beijing tightening control over social media
Some eight months after the ouster of its long-serving strongman, Hosni Mubarak, Egypt’s revolution remains the most prominent byproduct of the so-called “Arab Spring.” But where, exactly, is Cairo headed? While there remains no shortage of optimism about Egypt’s future in many quarters, a close look at the economic indicators suggests that the country may not be moving toward post-revolutionary stability at all. In fact, it is rapidly heading in the opposite direction.
China to Japan: stop scrambling fighters to intercept our planes;
Beijing may look to Taoism as extension of soft power
As Pakistan has forced its way into America's national con sciousness over the past few years, bookshelves have grown crowded with publications devoted to deciphering the murky politics behind this nuclear-armed nation in perpetual crisis. The latest entry to this roster, "The Pakistan Cauldron: Conspiracy, Assassination and Instability," is a welcome one, and comes to us from James Farwell, a strategic communications guru and longtime adviser to U.S. Special Operations Command and Strategic Command.
TODAY, the International Atomic Energy Agency released a report on Iran’s nuclear program. It provides the most convincing evidence to date that Iran is close to producing a nuclear weapon.
But as Iran nears the nuclear threshold, the best way to stop it may be by punishing the Chinese companies that supply Tehran and enable its nuclear progress.
In recent years, the United States has imposed a punishing sanctions regime on Iran’s banking sector. To further increase Tehran’s level of financial pain, a great number of congressional and advocacy groups have repeatedly called on the White House to blacklist the Central Bank of Iran (CBI). Doing so, the thinking goes, would seriously hamper the Islamic republic’s ability to abuse international markets in its pursuit of nuclear weapons. Yet unbeknownst to most lawmakers and Washington policymakers, the U.S. Treasury actually hasblacklisted the CBI, and not once, but twice in recent years. The real question is why the U.S. government has not enforced its own sanctions regime.
Tragic is the word most often used to describe the life of Syed Saleem Shahzad. A celebrated Pakistani investigative journalist, Shahzad nearly became a household name in May 2011 after his mysterious murder made international headlines. Reviled by terrorists and Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI) alike for his penetrating reporting, months before his murder the forty-year-old reporter repeatedly warned friends of specific threats to his life from Pakistani intelligence agents. One day after publishing a report about militant infiltration into Pakistan’s security services, Shahzad was kidnapped. His body was found, dumped in a canal and bearing obvious signs of torture, two days later. Widespread accusations leveled at the ISI inside Pakistan were privately echoed by U.S. officials, marking another grim chapter in the history of the world’s most notorious intelligence service.
Kashmir CM calls for revoking AFSPA;
NATO open to BMD cooperation with India;
India and China spar over South China Sea;
Pakistan grants India MFN status
Indian governor wants new regiment to defend border with China;
China grapples with outbreak of food poisoning
It is something of a truism that in Washington, bad ideas never truly go away. Instead, they keep cropping up at the most inopportune moments. So it is with American policy toward Iran. Stymied in recent months by the resilience of Iran's increasingly mature nuclear effort and complicated by the unfolding turmoil of the “Arab Spring,” policymakers inside the Beltway are once again flirting with the idea that some sort of diplomatic rapprochement with the Islamic Republic is in fact possible.
China's BMD efforts advance;
India, NATO align on missile defense;
South Korea adds missile deterrent;
Reassuring Russia over European defense;
Turkey shuts Israel out of early warning;
New Russian ICBM stumbles out of the gate
Turkey hosts armed Syrian opposition;
Saudi succession reshuffle;
US drone base in Ethiopia;
Libyan arms make way to Gaza Strip
China denies PLA operating in Kashmir;
Ministry of Health looks to correct flawed prescription drug program
South Africa denies Dalai Lama a visa;
Surge in Hong Kong heroin seizures headed for mainland
WHEN the "Arab Spring" unexpectedly broke out late last year, Natan Sharansky waxed optimistic. Writing in the Washington Post in March, the former Soviet refusenik who ranks as Israel's best known pro-democracy activist argued that the grassroots revolts that unseated Tunisian strongman Zine el-Abedine Ben Ali and Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak marked the start of a democratic tsunami that could soon engulf the region. Regional conditions, he counseled, were ripe for just this sort of radical surgery.
These days, however, Israelis who share this hopeful outlook are exceedingly hard to find. A recent visit found policymakers and academics of all political stripes deeply apprehensive of the tectonic shifts that have taken place in their region this year. They have good reason to be. Israel's security environment, never favorable, has taken a dramatic turn for the worse.
Anti-China sentiment rises in Burma, dam project on hold;
Former Chinese premier decries corruption in memoir
The foiled Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the United States, which was made public by the White House on Oct. 11, amounts to a dramatic escalation of the West's confrontation with Iran. In the wake of the disclosure, the Obama administration has talked tough, pledging new diplomatic pressure against Iran and emphasizing that "all options are on the table" as it contemplates its response.
But what can actually be done about Iran's clerical army and the radical regime that enables it? The most ready answer lies in the prominent role the IRGC now plays in the Iranian economy, which can be exploited by Washington and its allies in the service of a new economic offensive against the Islamic republic.
On Human Rights in Iran;
On the Treatment of Civil Society Actors;
On Women's Rights;
On Religious and Ethnic Minorities;
On Capital Punishment;
 
Prokhorov pulls back the curtain on "
Just Cause"
Yukos exonerated... at least in part
Beijing scraps Confucius Peace Prize;
Russia deploy missiles to Far East to "
counter"
China
Pak: "
An enemy of China is an enemy of Pakistan"
Nigerian officials intercept illicit arms from China
The Kremlin's asset fire sale;
Britain tries to bury the hatchet
U.S. publicly exposes Pakistan's double game;
An Af-Pak divorce?;
Kabul turns to New Delhi;
Afghan dependence on foreign aid troubling
Sex education brought to Chinese schools for first time;
Beijing goes after crime and corruption in "
marriage of black and red"
Hamas spreads wings to Turkey, China;
Iraq signs deals for 18 F-16s;
Iron dome passes test;
Yemen's president returns, Awlaki killed in drone strike
It's all over but the counting. Russia's presidential election may still be some six months away, but the outcome of that contest is already crystal clear: a return of Vladimir Putin to the country's top post.
On September 24th, Mr. Putin, who currently serves as Russia's prime minister, ended months of fevered speculation about his political plans when he confirmed that he intends to stand anew for the country's presidency—and that, if elected, he will switch places with his hand-picked protégé, current president Dmitry Medvedev.
That result is all but a foregone conclusion. Over the past decade, thanks to the machinations of Mr. Putin and his coterie, Russia has crept steadily back toward Soviet-style authoritarianism. Today, the "United Russia" political faction headed by Mr. Putin dominates the country's political landscape and controls both houses of Russia's legislature, while his loyalists stack virtually all meaningful leadership positions in Moscow and the country's 83 regions. And with political power increasingly centralized in the Kremlin, divergent viewpoints are given less and less legitimate outlet. Dissidents and activists who do not accept the prevailing status quo have found themselves in legal jeopardy—or worse.
Russia's financial inroads into Eastern Europe;
Flying Russia's deadly skies
Party takes stiffer line against "
forced demolitions"
Taiwan beefs up defenses against Chinese hackers
Cat-and-mouse over Gaza rockets;
Taiwan scrambles for missile deterrent;
Debating missile defense in Europe;
Taking Russia to court over missile defense;
India's missile defense grid takes shape
Progress in Politkovskaya Case;
Rosneft, Exxon in major partnership deal
You could be forgiven for dismissing the latest diplomatic spat between the United States and Pakistan as just another hiccup in a long-estranged marriage. Trading accusations and navigating diplomatic crises has become a weekly affair for this deeply troubled alliance. But the broadside launched against Pakistan by the US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in congressional testimony on September 22 represents a rupture so dramatic that its significance is difficult to overstate.
CPC looks to strengthen auditing of the PLA;
Taiwan deploying new missiles to target Chinese airports, harbor
Iran's Cultural Revolution Inches Forward;
Malaise and Despair in the Islamic Republic;
Blowback from the "
Arab Spring"
Iran-Pakistan Pipeline Inches Forward;
New American Attention to Democracy in Iran
Pakistan looks to reform FATA governance... sort of;
China upgrades missiles, India upgrades missile defense;
India and China spar at sea;
Maoists still threat #1
China and India spar at sea;
Russians in the Far East find greener grass in China
Does the Islamic Republic of Iran pose a cyber threat to the United States? On the surface, the idea seems far-fetched. Squeezed by sanctions over its nuclear ambitions, suffering from widespread social malaise and weathering unprecedented divisions among its leadership, Iran hardly seems an imminent threat to the U.S. homeland - even if it does pose a vexing challenge to American interests in the greater Middle East.
Yet mounting indicators suggest that Iran's leadership is actively contemplating cyberwarfare against America and its allies.
Tussle for the Arctic heats up;
How Russia is exploiting the "
Arab Spring"
Ten years after the attacks of Sept. 11 and the start of the war on terror, it is fair to ask: Where do we stand in this struggle? Listening to the rhetoric of the White House, it would be easy to get the impression that Washington is just days away from declaring “Mission accomplished.” With the death in May of Osama bin Laden at the hands of U.S. commandos, the United States “is within reach of strategically defeating al Qaeda,” newly appointed Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta told reporters in July. “I think we have them on the run.” More recently, John Brennan, the White House’s counterterrorism czar, said much the same, telling the Associated Press that the group that carried out the most devastating attacks on the U.S. homeland in American history is “on the ropes.”
Such triumphalism, however, is both premature and unfounded. After all, the contemporary terrorist threat confronting the United States and its allies is considerably larger than just al Qaeda. America today faces a trio of distinct - and daunting - strategic challenges.
China to develop massive Liwan gas field;
Russia beefing up security at China border
US looks to expand NDN;
Chaos in the Sinai;
Syria faces growing isolation abroad;
More calls for PA to end statehood bid
Ethiopian militants threaten Chinese investments;
PLA unveiles 10 year plan to restructure military academies