Is Japan still relevant?
March 3, 2011 3 min. read

As the introductory post to the Japan foreign policy blog, I pose the question, “Is Japan still relevant?” Twenty some years ago, no one would have thought to raise this question. In 1989, Japan was at the height of its asset price “bubble.” Japan’s post-war economy was dubbed an “economic miracle,” and it maintained the […]

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Dealing with Somali Pirates: Lessons from the Strait of Malacca
March 2, 2011 4 min. read

This is a post on Somali pirates that I wrote for the American Enterprise Institute’s Enterprise Blog. I thought would be good to upload here too since it focuses on lessons for Somalia from Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore’s strategy for combating piracy in the Strait of Malacca. Arthur Herman published an impassioned article in the […]

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What Makes One Indian Enough to Write About India?*
March 2, 2011 5 min. read

Recently there has been some heated discussion on who is ‘morally qualified’ to write about India. Socio-economic changes have made India the apple pie of global literary – fiction and non-fiction – circle. Patrick French’s India: A Portrait and Anand Giridharadas’s India Calling: An Intimate Portrait of a Nation’s Remaking have invited the ire of […]

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Dr. Yunus, Founder of Grameen Bank Dismissed From Leadership Role
March 2, 2011 3 min. read

Dr. Mohammad Yunus has been fired from his role as managing director of Grameen Bank, essentially because he did not seek approval of his leadership role from Bangladesh Bank, the central bank of Bangladesh, from the moment he turned 61.  Really, that’s the reason he was fired earlier today. According to the New York Times: […]

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AL Withdraws Charges Against Former President H.M. Ershad
March 2, 2011 2 min. read

The Awami League government just let H.M. Ershad have a pass–it dropped charges brought against him by the BNP led government of the 1990’s.  Along with 75 others withdrawals out 836 politically motivated cases,the case against former President Ershad’s moves to buy radar techinology from the United States at a higher price, presumably pocketing the […]

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Minorities Minister Assassinated: Another Assassination Charged to Blasphemy Laws
March 2, 2011 2 min. read

Tehrik-e-Taliban, Pakistan’s contagion across the Kush, is bent on taking down the government in Islamabad by destroying the foundational liberal and multicultural bases that it had long promised to cherish.  Militants have shot and killed the minorities minister, Shahbaz Bhatti, a man who had for some time challenged the fundamentally intolerant and morally insecure and […]

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New blog coming soon!
March 1, 2011 1 min. read

New blog coming soon!

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The Tangled World we Live in – How Inflation, Weather, and Food Prices lead to Revolutions!
February 26, 2011 6 min. read

By now, everyone monitoring the developments in the Middle East can’t help but liken them to dominos: once the first dictatorship fell (in Tunisia), the rest were just a matter of time.  Of course societies do not behave like toys – what is common among the revolting populations of the Middle East is that they […]

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Bangladesh's Mutual Advantage Relationship With Int'l Powers Continues
February 25, 2011 2 min. read

The government of Bangladesh is working with its counterparts in Russia to put in a 2000 megawatt power plant in the district of Pabna.  The joint move was put into play yesterday after having been accepted as a feasible policy last May. The final deal will be signed by Sheikh Hasina during a state visit to […]

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3 Interesting Business and Investment developments in February 2011
February 24, 2011 1 min. read

 Bangladesh, like other regional developing economies, has over the years taken steps to open up its doors to foreign investment.  The Board of Investment (BoI) recently announced the following changes to its policy: Simpler rules and regulations for foreign companies seeking to open offices in Bangladesh Foreign workers must receive a work permit from BoI […]

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Contemptible Characters & Counterterrorism in Pakistan
February 24, 2011 7 min. read
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Zainab Jeewanjee discusses CNN coverage of Libya’s Gaddafi and recent uprisings. She weaves that story into a larger discussion of enemy, but rational world figures operating against American interests and how understanding their political objectives is key to an effective counterterrorism strategy post 9/11, specifically in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

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Preah Vihear Temple Dispute
February 23, 2011 2 min. read

Overshadowed by unrest in the Middle East, violent border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia flared up again this month in the region surrounding the Preah Vihear temple. Thailand and Cambodia have been fighting over the temple for more than a century. Commissioned by Kings in the Khmer Empire (based in what is now Cambodia), Preah […]

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