India
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Review: Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order – by Bruno Maçães

The Belt and Road Initiative, launched by China in 2013, is a transformative foreign policy project aimed at enhancing China’s global influence through trade routes reminiscent of the Silk Road. While it has received mixed responses, particularly from Western nations, it offers countries alternatives to Western hegemony, promoting economic development but also raising geopolitical tensions,… Continue reading
Africa, Asia, Asia-PAcific, Australia, Beijing, Belt and Road, Belt and Road initiative, Bruno Maçães, CCP, Central Asia, China, Chinese, Chinese Communist Party, civilization, Communism, Communist, democracy, Europe, European Union, France, Geopolitics, Germany, gunpowder, Human rights, Hungary, India, International Relations, Japan, Kazakhstan, liberalism world order, Marco Polo, Middle Corridor, Military, mother country, Naples, One Belt One Road, Pakistan, paper, PLA, ports, Putin, Realpolitik, Red Army, Russia, Silk Road, trade, US hegemony, USA, Vladimir Putin, Western, Xi Jinping -
Review: The Oxford History of Modern China – by Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom

The content outlines China’s historical journey from the late Ming dynasty to the modern era under President Xi Jinping. It emphasizes key events such as the Qing dynasty, opium wars, rise of communism, and China’s transformation into a global superpower. The book serves as an accessible introduction to understanding China’s contemporary significance. Continue reading
Belt and Road initiative, British East India Company, Buddhism, CCP, century of humiliation, chiang kai-shek, China, Chinese Communist Party, Chinese Emperor, cold war, Communism, Communist, cultural revolution, Deng Xiaoping, Great Leap Forward, Han, henry kissinger, Hong Kong, India, Kuomintang, Manchu, mao, mao tse-tung, mao zedong, Ming, One child policy, opium, Opium Wars, President Nixon, Qing, Red Army, reforms, Sino-Soviet Split, Soviet Union, Stalin, Sun Yat-Sen, Tianamen Square, United Nations, US hegemony, USA, Whie Lotus, World War 2, WTO, Xi Jinping -
Chatham House: What does Russia want in the Black Sea region?

This Chatham House roundtable discussion is chaired by Hugo Dixon, Reuters. On the panel are: Galip Dalay, Turkey Initiative, MENA Programme and Natalie Sabanadze, Russia and Eurasia Programme. Galip and Natalie have done a report on ‘Russia’s Black Sea Strategy’. The entire European security architecture is under scrutiny in the high level peace talks that… Continue reading
Africa, Armenia, Balkans, Baltics, Black Sea, Caucasus, Central Asia, Chatham House, China, Crimea, Dardanelles, Energy security, Europe, Galip Dalay, Global South, India, iran, Latin America, mediterranean, MENA Programme, Middle Corridor, Military, Moldova, Natalie Sabanadze, NATO, Odessa, peacekeeping, Putin, Reuters, Russia, sea drones, Shadow Fleet, Transnistria, Turkey, Turkey Initiative, Ukraine, USA, Vladimir Putin -
Chatham House: How Effective Are The United States’ Sanctions? 19.06.2023

Chatham House is the Royal Institute of International Affairs. It is based in St. James’ Square, Mayfair, London, a short walk from Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square. I have been a member of Chatham House for several months but with me being based in Wales all of my interactions thus far have been on Zoom. I had… Continue reading
amazon, AMerica, Anar Bata, Army Chief of the General Staff, Beijing, blackmarket, BRICS, Chatham House, Chatham House library, Chatham House member, Chatham House Rule, China, Chinese, Chinese economics, Chinese laws, Chinese sanctions, cold war, corruption, crack den, Crimea, Cuba, cybersecurity, Dalai Lama, Daniel Drezner, democracy, Don Corleone, DPRK, Dr Leslie Vinjamuri, economics, elite, Europe, Financial Times, foreign policy, Four Four Cyber, General Sir Patrick Sanders, Geopolitics, Georgia, India, Infosecurity, International Affairs, iran, Kazakhstan, legislation, Leicester Square, Leslie Vinjamuri, librarian, Mayfair, Military, NATO, North Korea, nuclear non-proliferation treaty, nuclear weapons, Organised Crime, oxycontin, passive-aggressive, Piccadilly Circus, Politics, precision-guided munitions, Professor Daniel W Drezner, Queen Elizabeth II, renminbi, Russia, Russian, Russian gas, Russian Mafia, sanctions, serbia, south africa, St James' Square, St Petersburg, supply chain, SWIFT, The Economist, The Godfather, Ukraine, United States, United STates of America, US and Americas programme, US hegemony, USA, Vladimir Putin, Wales, war, Washington Post, weaponised energy, Welsh, Westphalian -
Review: Kim – by Rudyard Kipling

‘Kim’ is recognised as the greatest work of famous author Rudyard Kipling. This is a cult novel especially in espionage circles. It is fiction but documents the widely popular Great Game between the British Empire and Tsarist Russia, a clandestine cat and mouse conflict between the two powers fought out on in British India and… Continue reading
British Empire, Buddhism, buddhist, Chela, classics, colonialism, enlightenment, espionage, fiction, Geography, Great Britain, Great Game, himalayas, Hindi, Hindu, Imperial India, India, Islam, KGB, Kim, kim philby, Kipling, lama, Little Friend of the World, mi6, Muslim, Musselman, Queen Victoris, Raj, religion, Rudyard Kipling, Russia, Sahib, Soviet Union, Spiritual, spy, The Great Game, The Wheel of Life, Travel, treachery, Tsar, Tsarist Russia, U.K., United Kingdom -
Review: The Great Game – On Secret Service in High Asia – by Peter Hopkirk

The Great Game, as immortalised by Rudyard Kipling in ‘Kim’ was the nineteenth century adventures in espionage between Russia and the U.K. across Central Asia. Both sides were on the verge of a full on military confrontation and sought advantage. The Russian Tsars sought territorial expansion across Asia and always had their eye on the… Continue reading
Afghanistan, Anglophobe, Asia, Britain, British, British Empire, British Geographical Society, China, CrimeaN WAR, espionage, exploration, Geographical Society, Geography, Great Britain, India, intrigue, Kim, London, Persia, Queen Victoria, Rudyard Kipling, Russia, Russian, Russophobe, spy, St Petersburg, The Great Game, Tibet, Tirkmenistan, Tsar, U.K., Vodka -
Review: The Edge – Is the Military Dominance of the West Coming to an End – by Mark Urban

Only a short volume, this well-written work documents the weakening of the West in the geopolitical arena. The book first focuses on the reductions in military power of Western nations, both in terms of their military budgets and also their matériel. Despite modern weapons being produced, the volume of forces and the amount of weapons… Continue reading
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