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News: Americas Role in Asia

Lao Institute of Foreign Affairs and Asia Foundation Co-Organize Lecture in Vientiane

In a news brief for the Lao News Agency detailing a lecture held in Vientiane entitled, “Evolving East Asian Regionalism and the Role of the United States in the Asia-Pacific Region: National Interests and Strategic Imperative,” The Asia Foundation is credited with co-organizing the event with The Lao Institute of Foreign Affairs. Read the full article: “US foreign policy for Asia-Pacific disseminated.”

EVENT, April 2-3: The Asia Foundation co-sponsors World Affairs Council’s 63rd Annual World Conference

“Global Priorities: Critical Choices for the Obama Administration.”

On the heels of releasing its recommendations for the new U.S. administration – America’s Role in Asia – The Asia Foundation will co-sponsor the World Affairs Council’s 63rd Annual World Conference, “Global Priorities: Critical Choices for the Obama Administration.”  On April 2-3, 2009, in San Francisco, political leaders, policymakers, scholars, and diplomats will gather to examine, and debate these issues at this turning point in U.S. history. Asia Foundation President Doug Bereuter will moderate a session on emerging economies, China, India and sovereign wealth funds, and other Asia Foundation experts are slated to participate on additional panels. Co-sponsors receive a special discounted rate: sign up for the member price. For more information about the event, and nonmember pricing, please visit the World Affairs Council website.

CNBC Interviews The Asia Foundation’s John Brandon on U.S.-Asia Relations

While in Singapore, John Brandon, The Asia Foundation’s Director, International Relations and Associate Director, Washington, D.C., gave a live studio interview to CNBC’s Maura Fogarty and Rebecca Meehan on the significance of Hillary Clinton’s trip to Asia. The interview, which covered the significance of Secretary Clinton’s visit to Asia and U.S.-Asia issues topping her agenda, was aired on CNBC’s “Capital Connection” news program on Friday. View the segment: “Future of U.S.-Asia Relations.”

Washington Post Features Asia Foundation America’s Role in Asia India Event

New Delhi

The Washington Post’s Emily Wax attended The Asia Foundation’s America’s Role in Asia event in New Delhi and gauged reaction in the room about the appointment of Richard C. Holbrooke, including quotes from America’s Role in Asia South Asia Co-Chair Raja Mohan and others. Read the full story: “U.S. Removes Kashmir From Envoy’s Mandate; India Exults.”

ASIA FOUNDATION CONVENES TOP INDIA AND U.S. EXPERTS TO EXAMINE U.S.-INDIA RELATIONS IN THE NEW OBAMA ADMINISTRATION

New Delhi, India

Diplomats urge U.S. President to deepen U.S.-India relationship, accelerate South Asian economies

As Barack Obama takes the reigns as the 44th President of the United States, international relations experts strongly recommend to the new U.S. administration that they continue to improve ties with India. America’s Role in Asia, a new volume of urgent foreign policy recommendations, presented by distinguished Asian and American ambassadors this morning at the Hotel Taj Mahal in New Delhi, states that, while the U.S. has often talked about making India a full partner in managing the global order, it must take immediate steps, such as making India a full member of the G-8 group of advanced nations.

Convened and supported by The Asia Foundation, America’s Role in Asia provides recommendations derived from a year of high-level, closed-door discussions across Asia and in the U.S. that addressed critical issues in U.S.-Asia relations. Today’s New Delhi forum turns a spotlight on recommendations in the report for U.S.-India relations and U.S. policy in South Asia. Attendees include leading Indian and American diplomats, officials, CEOs, and scholars; and speakers include Ambassador Karl F. Inderfurth, former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs; Dr. C. Raja Mohan, professor at the Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang, Technological University in Singapore, and former member of India’s National Security Advisory Board; and Ambassador Rajendra Abhyankar, former Indian Ambassador to the EU, Belgium and Luxemburg, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Syria, and Cyprus, and Asia Foundation Director of India Programs.

“The last two American presidents recognized that fundamental change was underway with India as an emerging global power and acted accordingly,” said Ambassador Inderfurth, author of the America’s Role in Asia chapter on U.S.-India relations. “A strong foundation for a vibrant U.S.-India relationship has been established, upon which the next U.S. administration can build.”

“India is an important factor,” added Dr. Mohan, the South Asia Regional Chair of America’s Role in Asia. “South Asia will become increasingly relevant to a number of new challenges confronting U.S. foreign policy, such as Asia’s regional balance of power, maritime security, and global warming.”

Among the Asian task force recommendations for U.S. policy to South Asia:

  • The Subcontinent needs a strong economic partnership with the U.S. Washington can accelerate regional economic integration by offering preferential tariffs to goods produced across borders in South Asia, and encourage investments by its companies on the Subcontinent.
  • The United States must undertake a significant effort to win political support among the Pushtun tribes, separate them from al-Qaeda and the Taliban, and make them stakeholders in the war against terror. The United States also needs to recognize how deeply the Pushtun question divides Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Among the American task force recommendations for U.S.-India relations and overall policy to South Asia:

  • U.S. and Indian officials have set a goal of doubling bilateral trade over the next three years. It is time to accelerate the growth in these ties.
  • Another arena for greater strategic cooperation is in counter-terrorism. India has been a target of terrorist attacks longer than the United States. Expanding counter-terrorism cooperation requires increased information sharing and building tighter liaison bonds with India’s intelligence and security services.

The New Delhi discussion was convened with the Confederation of Indian Industry, a partner to The Asia Foundation. Published on a quadrennial cycle by The Asia Foundation, the full report is available to download at www.asiafoundation.org, as are overviews of the reports and executive summaries.

About The Asia Foundation

The Asia Foundation formally returned to India in June 2008, opening a liaison office in New Delhi. Since 1968, the Foundation has maintained a non-resident program of cooperation, focusing on international relations, governance, economic reform, women’s empowerment, and education.

Event – Oct. 20: Opportunities and Challenges in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan

The Asia Foundation, The Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, and the Peninsula Chapter of the World Affairs Council of Northern California present

Opportunities and Challenges in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan

With Special Guests:

The Honorable Karl F. Inderfurth
Director, International Affairs Program, George Washington University, Elliott School of International Affairs. Former Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs and U.S. Representative for Special Political Affairs to the UN

The Honorable Teresita Schaffer
Director, South Asia Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies. Former U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs

The Honorable Theodore L. Eliot, Jr.
Dean Emeritus of the Fletcher School. Former U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan; Former Executive Secretary and Inspector General of the State Department

Monday, October 20, 2008

Palo Alto, CA

Refreshments at 6:00 pm
Program from 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm

Levinthal Hall at the Humanities Center
424 Santa Teresa Street,
Stanford University

Seating is limited, reservations required.

Please reply to rdrsvp@asiafound.org, reference “October 20th evening event” in the subject line.

View maps and Directions.

The election of a new American president is an event of great importance to the entire world, not just the United States. From Japan to Afghanistan, the United States plays a crucial role in the security, political, and economic affairs of the region. America’s 44th president will face many challenges once in office including rebuilding trust in America, reviving the American economy without protectionism, and how to combat terrorism. Ultimately, the United States must effectively utilize and support multilateral institutions to uphold international law and foster the common interests such as international justice. Future U.S. relations with Northeast, Southeast, and South Asia depend on how these efforts unfold.

The Asia Foundation’s John Brandon op-ed published in AsianWeek

John Brandon, The Asia Foundation’s Director, International Relations and Associate Director, Washington, D.C., authored an op-ed which was published in this week’s edition of AsianWeek. The op-ed details how the Asian-American communities in California have strengthened both the state and the country’s economic and cultural fabric of life. Read the full piece, “California’s Role in Asia.”

Council on Foreign Relations: North Korea After Kim

The Council on Foreign Relations has published a backgrounder on North Korea, which mentions The Asia Foundation’s America’s Role in Asia report and quotes Ambassador Han Sung-Joo. Read the backgrounder  “North Korea After Kim.”

The Washington Post: North Korea After Kim

The Washington Post today published the Council on Foreign Relations backgrounder on North Korea, which mentions The Asia Foundation’s America’s Role in Asia report and quotes Ambassador Han Sung-Joo. Read the story “North Korea After Kim.”

BBC: Re-engage with Asia, US urged

The Asia Foundation’s report, America’s Role in Asia: Asian and American Views continues to garner media coverage, including an article in the BBC which cites ARA extensively. Read the BBC article, “Re-engage with Asia, US is urged.”

Radio Australia: What Asia Wants from the Next U.S. President

Two of the authors of The Asia Foundation’s America’s Role in Asia: Asian and American Views, Ambassador J. Stapleton Roy and Ambassador Han Sung-Joo, were interviewed about the report by Radio Australia. Streaming audio and a transcript of the interview are both available from the Radio Australia story, “What Asia Wants from the Next U.S. President.”

Reuters: Next president should focus more on Asia

Reuters today published a story about the release of The Asia Foundation’s America’s Role in Asia: Asian and American Views report and the report’s recommendations. Read “Next president should focus more on Asia: study.”

Report: Asia Requires Urgent U.S. Attention

WASHINGTON, D.C.

(A Mongolian version of this press release is also available for download.)

Top Asian and U.S. foreign policy experts urge incoming U.S. administration to put Asia at top of agenda

U.S. must maintain constructive response to China’s rise

The health of the U.S. economy is now tied to Asia in fundamental ways that, if not grasped quickly by the incoming presidential administration, could have unintended, adverse consequences, according to America’s Role in Asia: Asian and American Views, a new published volume of foreign policy recommendations written by 20 distinguished Asian and U.S. experts and released this morning in Washington. Although relations with China are generally constructive, the report states, the U.S. must, in order to minimize threats to American security and prosperity, maintain a constructive response as China continues to rise. Further, the report underscores the importance of responding to the “rise of the rest” by adjusting the membership in various international organizations. Convened and supported by The Asia Foundation, this landmark report is the product of a year of high-level, closed-door discussions across Asia and in the U.S. that addressed critical bilateral and trans-national issues in U.S.-Asia relations, including Korea, Afghanistan, Pakistan, energy security, environmental degradation, Asia’s regional alliances, trade, and investment.

Published on a quadrennial cycle, America’s Role in Asia provides U.S. policymakers with concrete recommendations on how to address pressing challenges and opportunities in Asia. Further, in order to put Asia on the party platforms for the 2008 Democratic and Republican conventions, advance summaries of the recommendations were recently hand-delivered to top foreign policy advisors to both candidates.

“The region needs urgent attention,” agreed Ambassador Michael Armacost and Ambassador J. Stapleton Roy, American co-chairs of America’s Role in Asia. “The most consequential emerging powers—China and India—are casting longer shadows, and America’s relative power is declining. The new administration must accord Asia the attention its intrinsic importance to us demands.”

The report is divided into American and Asian views, reflecting the thinking of some of the most accomplished U.S.-Asia relations experts in the world. The project’s American task force was led by Armacost, who is Shorenstein Senior Fellow at the Asia Pacific Center at Stanford University, former Undersecretary of State, and former U.S. Ambassador to Japan and the Philippines; and Roy, who is Vice Chairman of Kissinger International Associates, former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State, and former U.S. Ambassador to Indonesia, China and Singapore. The Asian task force was chaired by Ambassador Han Sung-Joo, chairman of the Asan Institute in Seoul and former Foreign Minister of South Korea; Ambassador Tommy Koh, chairman of the Institute of Policy Studies, Ambassador-at-Large in Singapore, and Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York; and Dr. C. Raja Mohan, professor at the Rajanthan School of International Studies in Singapore and former member of India’s National Security Advisory Board.

“This report was prepared with the expressed intent to inform and influence future American foreign policy for the Asia-Pacific region so that sound, workable solutions to common problems are found,” said Douglas Bereuter, president of The Asia Foundation and 26-year veteran of Congress, where he chaired the Asia-Pacific Subcommittee. “A major objective of The Asia Foundation is to foster greater understanding between the United States and Asia, and we’re very pleased that our extensive relationships and unique access to a wide range of U.S. and Asian leaders has resulted in these important, timely perspectives.”

Among the findings and recommendations of the American task force:

  • Trade-related issues need to be high on the agenda of the new administration: namely, the restoration of fast-track negotiating authority, the completion of the Doha round, the ratification of the U.S.-ROK Free Trade Agreement, and determination of the weight to be attached to Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) in pursuing Asian trade initiatives. Neglect of these issues will deal a body blow to U.S. global economic leadership.
  • [The] approach to counter-terrorism in the Middle East and South Asia requires new strategic footing that neither overshadows nor underrates a host of other foreign policy challenges. The Global War on Terror was an unfortunate misnomer. It encouraged excessive emphasis on military force. It persuaded some that the enemy was Islam, rather than a few misguided groups within Islam’s ranks disposed to a permanent jihad against the “infidels.” We should not lump potential Islamist enemies together; the goal is to divide them, and deal with them in a discriminating way.
  • Energy cooperation. The high cost of energy is becoming a major threat to the continued growth and prosperity of Asia, just as it is elsewhere in the world. The United States can make a major contribution to containing these incentives for rivalry by encouraging policies that foster cooperative approaches to energy security. Most Asian countries are major consumers of imported fuels. All would benefit from expanded cooperation with the United States in efforts to persuade OPEC and other producers to expand exploration for oil and natural gas, to accelerate the commercial development of alternative environmentally-friendly fuels, to utilize existing sources of energy more efficiently, and to stockpile reserves for emergencies.

Among the findings and recommendations of the Asian taskforce:

  • The United States would be well advised to set a good example of upholding the very values it espouses. U.S. allies in the region are acutely aware of America’s poor image among their own publics and want the next administration’s foreign policy to pay special attention to public diplomacy. Both Americans and Asians will benefit if the political, intellectual, and cultural bridges are strengthened.
  • The U.S. should actively support a regional architecture in Asia. Bilateral relations are important, but greater emphasis should be placed on multinational diplomacy around political, economic, and security issues. This includes signing the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation (TAC), which, at a minimum, would allow the United States to be an effective dialogue partner with members of the East Asia Summit.
  • The new administration should work with Asian regional institutions to begin a dialogue on energy security and climate change — particularly in the area of curbing greenhouse gas emissions – and to bring the post-Kyoto negotiations to a successful conclusion. The United States must share its expertise in energy efficiency, including clean and renewable energy, carbon capture and sequestration.

The full report is available for download, as are overviews of the reports and executive summaries.

Download the full report, America’s Role in Asia: Asian and American Views.

See a full list of related documents.

Event: September 10 – America’s Role in Asia Report Launch

Washington, D.C.

September 10, 2008

The National Press Club
Conference Room
529 14th Street, NW
Washington, D.C.
9:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.

The Asia Foundation is pleased to announce the release of two reports under the America’s Role in Asia project, a comprehensive assessment of U.S.-Asia relations. During a series of workshops over the past year, leading American and Asian policymakers and scholars analyzed the challenges facing the U.S. in Asia and recommended policy initiatives to the U.S. administration and Congress.

Featured speakers are the America’s Role in Asia project’s Asian workshop co-chairmen: Ambassador Han Sung-joo, Chairman of the Asian Institute for Policy Studies and former Foreign Minister of South Korea (Northeast Asia), Ambassador Tommy Koh, Chairman of the Institute of Policy Studies and Ambassador-at-Large in Singapore (Southeast Asia), and Dr. C. Raja Mohan, Professor at Nanyang Technological University and author of “Impossible Allies: Nuclear India, the United States, and Global Order” (South Asia), as well as American workshop co-chairman: Ambassador J. Stapleton Roy, Vice Chairman of Kissinger Associates.

Held on a quadrennial cycle since 2000, ARA examines critical issues in U.S.-Asian relations through a series of workshops and discussions in Asia and the U.S. These activities have culminated in published papers and reports that provide American and Asian policymakers and business leaders with views and recommendations designed to address challenges and opportunities in the region. The recommendations generated out of the 2008 program will coincide with the upcoming presidential and congressional elections and will provide a unique perspective for forthcoming U.S. policy towards Asia.

We hope you will join us for the report release.

To RSVP, please respond to hstewart@asiafound-dc.org by September 8, or fax (202) 588-9409 with the following information: Name, Organization, Email, Phone.

The Asia Foundation gratefully acknowledges the American International Group and the Chevron Corporation for their generous support of this project.

What Asia Wants From the Next U.S. President – The Christian Science Monitor

In conjunction with President Bush’s current visit to Asia, the Christian Science Monitor today published the story “What Asia Wants from the Next U.S. President,” which highlights policy recommendations made in The Asia Foundation’s forthcoming America’s Role in Asia: Asian and American Views report.

Find out more about the America’s Role in Asia program.

America’s Role in Asia: Asian and American Views – Agence France-Presse

Every four years, America’s Role in Asia brings together a distinguished group of Asian and American policy experts, current and former diplomats, and scholars to develop recommendations for U.S. policy toward Asia. The program reflects The Asia Foundation’s view that if workable solutions to common problems are to be found, perspectives from both sides of the Pacific must be heard and shared. Find out more about America’s Role in Asia.

Some of the recommendations are previewed in today’s Agence France-Presse wire story, “Experts ask new U.S. president to give Asia urgent attention,” which was picked up by a number of media outlets including AsiaOne News, the Wall Street Journal’s LiveMint, the Philippines Inquirer, and the Singapore Straits Times.