China Reform Monitor: No. 824
China establishes "
Party School on Anti-Corruption"
As labor prices and protections rise, businesses turn to foreign workers
China establishes "
Party School on Anti-Corruption"
As labor prices and protections rise, businesses turn to foreign workers
With a headiness nourished by electoral victory, every incoming American president succumbs to "new president's disease" - the confidence that, with more brains, more effort, and a better staff in and around the Oval Office, he will succeed on longstanding challenges where his predecessors have failed.
No challenge has so dominated the time of recent presidents as the fiery mix of issues that span the Middle East. But, in addressing them, our presidents have consistently operated on the basis of a conventional wisdom from our foreign policy establishment whose central tenets have repeatedly proved false.
Pak draws down troops from Kashmir;
Maoist protests paralyze Nepal;
India and Pak eye navy upgrades;
India and China bring water issues into the open
Beijing has big plans to dam the Brahmaputra;
CCP plans a "
household cleaning"
in Xinjiang
The latest issue to raise heckles [in India] has been cyberespionage. In January, India’s National Security Advisor MK Naryanan directly blamed China for multiple hacking attacks, and the chairman of India’s Cyber Law and IT Act Committee warned that same month that China had “raised a cyber army of about 300,000 people and their only job is to intrude upon the secured networks of other countries.” In April, a study by US and Canadian researchers claimed that a Chinese ‘shadow network’ had copied secret files of India’s defence ministry, potentially compromising some of India’s advanced weapons systems.