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Events
Andrew Light Speaker Tour in Europe May 14, 2013 / Berlin, Germany; Brussels, Belgium

GMF Senior Fellow Andrew Light participated in a speaking tour in Europe to discuss opportunities for transatlantic cooperation on climate and energy policy in the second Obama administration.

Audio
Deal Between Kosovo, Serbia is a European Solution to a European Problem May 13, 2013

In this podcast, GMF Vice President of Programs Ivan Vejvoda discusses last month's historic agreement to normalize relations between Kosovo and Serbia.

Andrew Small on China’s Influence in the Middle East Peace Process May 10, 2013

Anchor Elaine Reyes speaks with Andrew Small, Transatlantic Fellow of the Asia Program for the German Marshall Fund, about Beijing's potential role in brokering peace between Israel and Palestine

TOPICS: ‘Obama administration’

L’avenir du leadership américain : entre renouvellement et délégationJanuary 22, 2013 / Alexandra de Hoop SchefferThis policy brief describes what the author calls the United States' "double rebalancing."
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U.S.-China Economic Relations in the Wake of the U.S. ElectionNovember 29, 2012 / Bruce StokesThis policy brief looks at likely pillars of the Obama administration’s economic policy toward China in its second term.
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Moving Too Fast on Burma: Obama Breaks with Aung San Suu KyiJuly 16, 2012 / Daniel TwiningForeign PolicyThe Obama administration's decision to lift the U.S. investment ban on Burma is the first time Washington has publicly broken with the country's democratic opposition since Burma's fragile but consequential political opening began several years ago.
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EU Could Benefit from US’s Pacific focusJanuary 19, 2012 / Bruce StokesEuropean VoiceLast year was a big year for US trade policy and 2012 could be more active still.
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Why aren’t we working with Japan and India?July 18, 2011 / Daniel TwiningThe Washington PostThe Obama administration needs to consider what has shifted in our pivotal relationships with India and Japan and where it bears responsibility for the listlessness in our two biggest strategic partnerships in Asia.
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Why India has mixed emotions about ObamaAugust 06, 2010 / Daniel TwiningForeign PolicyIf this is truly to be a partnership of equals between the world's predominant power and its next democratic superpower, both New Delhi and Washington share a responsibility to propel it forward. If Obama's commitment to that process is less robust than that of his predecessors, all the more reason for India's leaders to step up theirs.
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Diplomatic NegligenceMay 10, 2010 / Daniel TwiningThe Weekly StandardDespite the many affinities between the United States and India, the Obama administration risks putting India back into its subcontinental box, treating it as little more than a regional power, while it elevates China, through both rhetoric and policy, to the level of a global superpower on par with the United States.
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On this Asia trip, Obama could take a cue from BushMarch 16, 2010 / Daniel TwiningForeign PolicyWhen it comes to Asia, perhaps serving administration officials should spend less time slamming their predecessors' record and more time studying up on it.
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China’s Af-Pak MomentMay 20, 2009 / Andrew SmallAs the United States and Europe look for additional sources of leverage in Pakistan and Afghanistan, a heightened role for China is one of the most promising-and the least discussed. China's substantial strategic interests in Pakistan, its major investments in both countries, and security concerns that range from narcotics flows to terrorist bases give it many shared stakes with the West. But translating common interests into complementary policies will be a challenge.
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