Concise policy papers and significant research findings by leading scholars, corporate executives, and current and former policymakers.
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The changing strategic environment in Asia has profound implications for the non-proliferation policy of the United States. The risks of a nuclearized Korean Peninsula, and all the ramifications this development would imply for our bilateral relationships with South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, and China, as well as for strategic stability in Asia, warrant a thorough re-examination of U.S. policy options to restore the regional powers’ confidence in non-proliferation regimes. There is a need for a U.S. program to reinforce Asia’s commitments to nuclear non-proliferation policies and to develop science and technology (S&T) exchange programs that reduce proliferation risks
Proliferation Risk Reduction in Asia: The Role of Cooperative Science and Technology Exchanges
The 109th Congress: Asia-Pacific Policy Outlook
Renminbi Revaluation
What Does SARS Mean for China?
108th Congress
The 107th Congress: Asia Pacific Policy Outlook
Indonesia in Transition: the 1999 Presidential Elections
China's Accession to the WTO: A Candid Appraisal from U.S. Industry
Coming to Terms with the "WTO Effect" on U.S.-China Trade and China's Economic Growth
The Impact of the Kosovo Conflict on China's Political Leaders and Prospects for WTO Accession
East Asia's Present and Future
East Asia in Crisis: Conference Report
Grounding Asia's Flying Geese: The Costs of Depending Heavily on Japanese Capital and Technology
Azerbaijan: U.S. Policy Options