AUTHOR SPOTLIGHTThe Best Writing on the Asia-Pacific

Leaving Without Losing

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The Diplomat speaks with Mark N. Katz, author of Leaving without Losing: The War on Terror After Iraq and Afghanistan, about how the U.S. withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan will impact the war on terror and the Asia-Pacific region.

Leaving Without LosingMark Katz

Leaving Without Losing : Mark Katz

In the book, you argue that the U.S. withdrawing from Afghanistan and Iraq might not be as detrimental to the larger war on terror as is often believed. In making this case, you draw parallels between the U.S. withdrawal from Indochina in the 1970’s and today. You note that despite some immediate successes, ultimately the Marxists did much to undermine their cause in the late 1970’s and 1980’s. What were some of the ways they did this and how might the Radical Islamists make comparable mistakes today?

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China and India: Great Power Rivals

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The Diplomat’s Southeast Asia correspondent Luke Hunt speaks with Mohan Malik, author of China and India – Great Power Rivals, for his take on how each of these potential superpowers is shaping up in the 21st century against a backdrop of political hype and possibly unrealistic expectations.

China and India: Great Power Rivals

Global commentators seem completely pre-occupied with the rise of China, and many assume this is the “China Century,” with superpower status all but guaranteed. Has too much hype been attached to this scenario?

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Deadly Embrace

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The Diplomat speaks with Bruce Riedel, author of ‘Deadly Embrace’ about the future of U.S.-Pakistan relations.

Deadly EmbraceBruce Riedel

Tension in the US-Pakistan relationship isn’t something new. But a recent book challenges the common perception that Islamabad is mostly responsible. In his book Deadly Embrace, Bruce Riedel writes that ‘America has been a fickle friend, sometimes acting as Pakistan’s closest ally and sharing important secret programmes, while at other times moving to isolate and impose sanctions against it.’

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Tsunami

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The Diplomat speaks with Jeff Kingston about the recovery effort from the March 11 tsunami that struck northeastern Japan.

TsunamiJeff Kingston

The earthquake and tsunami that struck northwest Japan on March 11 triggered an outpouring of charitable initiatives, including two books compiled in a matter of weeks that were published in print and electronic form and sold to raise money for the victims of the disaster. 2:46—Aftershocks: Stories from the Japan Earthquake, better known as Quakebook (Goken) is essentially written snapshots of the disaster, while Tsunami: Japan’s Post-Fukushima Future (Slate), examines the political, social and technological implications of the disaster from a long-term perspective. Its contributors include journalists, academics, a former central banker, a poet, an English teacher, an art historian and a non-profit executive.

The Diplomat interviewed Tsunami’s editor, Prof. Jeff Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple University’s Japan Campus, about the e-book, which was produced in collaboration with Foreign Policy magazine.

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The New Silk Road

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The Diplomat speaks with Ben Simpfendorfer, managing director of China Insider, about China’s relations in the Middle East.

The New Silk RoadBen Simpfendorfer

Can you give us some of the historical background to Middle East-China ties, or are the developing relationships a new phenomenon?

The historical background is the old Silk Road and the trade routes between China and the Middle East that largely ran overland, but also overseas at some points—the old spice routes. The trade on the old Silk Road faded away around the 1600s, so the modern historical backdrop is very, very limited.

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Counterinsurgency

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The Diplomat hears from counterinsurgency specialist David Kilcullen about the war in Afghanistan and the theory of COIN. Interview by Cynthia Iris.

CounterinsurgencyDavid Kilcullen

You say counterinsurgency (COIN) is a battlefield where ‘popular perceptions and rumour are more influential than the facts and more powerful than a hundred tanks.’ What are the battlefield perceptions and rumours in Afghanistan today?

It’s important to realize that some of the perceptions and attitudes of the population can seem perverse or completely unrealistic to us, until we try to see things from their standpoint. For example, one persistent rumour among Pashtuns is that the Americans are sponsoring the Taliban. Their theory goes that America is the most powerful nation on earth, we can put a man on the moon, so the so the only rational explanation for our failure to stabilize a little place like Afghanistan is that we must not want to.

So they talk about the ‘Pakistani Taliban’ (those sponsored by Pakistan), the ‘Iranian Taliban’ sponsored by Teheran, and the ‘American Taliban’ supposedly sponsored by us in order to keep the country weak and provide a pretext for our long-term colonization.

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The Freedom Trade-Off

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The Diplomat speaks with John Kampfner about the trade-offs between prosperity, consumer power and public and private freedoms.

Freedom for Sale: How we Made Money and Lost Our LibertyJohn Kampfner

The Diplomat speaks with John Kampfner about the trade-offs between prosperity, consumer power and public and private freedoms.

Your book describes the global phenomenon of people willing to give up their freedoms in return for an easy, comfortable life. You suggest that we’d all make this trade-off, regardless of the political system we’re in. Could you name some of what you think are the most striking examples of this?

The trade-off applies equally to countries that are long-established democracies and those that have a recent totalitarian or authoritarian past. In the UK, for example, the population was seemingly entirely comfortable with giving up all civil liberties from ID cards, to plans for a universal DNA database, to a surveillance state that allowed local councils to eavesdrop on phone calls and emails if they suspected citizens were being irresponsible in the way they threw away their garbage.

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Can China Be Green?

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The Diplomat speaks with Jonathan Watts about his book ‘When a Billion Chinese Jump’. Can the world survive Chinese growth?

When a Billion Chinese JumpJonathan Watts

When a Billion Chinese Jump

The environmental situation in China is anything but simple. ‘China is a 3000-year-old civilisation in the body of an industrial teenager; mega-rich, dirt-poor, overpopulated, under-resourced, ethnically diverse mass of humanity that is going through several stages of development simultaneously,’ writes Jonathan Watts in his upcoming book ‘When a Billion Chinese Jump.’ Based on his seven years of experiences as The Guardian's Asia environmental correspondent and seven months' travelling to almost every corner of China, Watts tries to make sense of the environmental state China is in, and what this means for the rest of the world.

The Diplomat contributor Brian Chapman spoke with Watts about his book—part reporting, part travelogue—about the dark reality of the country’s factory pollution, cancer villages, species loss and emissions hazards. And about what China can do to make its growth green and sustainable.

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