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28 August 2008



Northeast Asian Security: A New Paradigm?

By Eric A. Mcvadon

08/01/2008 - For a decade or more there has been active discussion of a security framework, structure, or mechanism for Northeast Asia. The discussions, which intensified over the last half decade, coincided with the Six-Party Talks concerning North Korea’s nuclear weapon program. Many imagined that the talks, representing noteworthy cooperative efforts by the principal regional players, could, and maybe should, carry over into some sort of security arrangement or organization—certainly including the United States, Japan, South Korea, Russia, notably China, and possibly North Korea; other countries as close and as distant geographically as Mongolia and Australia expressed interest in joining the initiative.



In a fortnight

Liu Jianchao, spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry

Energy Security the Centerpiece of China's Foreign Policy

By Russell Hsiao

08/01/2008 - The 2008 People's Republic of China (PRC) White Paper on Diplomacy placed energy security as a major centerpiece of the country's foreign policy. The White Paper represents "China's foreign policy and China's view on the international situation and introducing the status of China's foreign relations in the previous year" (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China, July 18). According to a Chinese report based on an exclusive preview granted to the Hong Kong-based newspaper Wen Wei Po a day before its official launch, the first chapter of the White Paper is reportedly on "The Issue of Energy Security During the Period of High Oil Prices," in which it states that the current high oil demands have put enormous strain on global energy security, and have grave implications for the global economy, security and political stability (Wen Wei Po, July 18). According to the White Paper, in 2007 competition for global energy resources has become more severe, while regional competition has exacerbated the global energy security problem. The White Paper asserts that high oil prices have increased global inflationary pressure, undermined the international financial system, added an economic burden for oil importing countries, and under the current high risk environment, the problem of high oil prices is becoming increasingly conspicuous (Wen Wei Po, July 18). The White Paper further states that under globalization, energy security is increasingly a global problem, the majority of countries cannot escape international cooperation to achieve the guarantees of energy security. The rise of oil prices, from a long term perspective, is not beneficial for both oil producing and consuming countries. The international community needs to move forward with dialogue and cooperation, to seek a common solution to the problem of high oil prices (Wen Wei Po, July 18). The White Paper specifically emphasized that China is currently the world's second largest producer and consumer of energy, and therefore an indispensable part of the global energy market, and is increasingly playing a prominent role in ensuring global energy security (Wen Wei Po, July 18).

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CCP Organization Department Director Li Yuanchao

CCP Launches Personnel Reform to Stem “Mass Incidents”

By Willy Lam

08/01/2008 - While political reform is off the agenda, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has taken some visible steps toward improving the quality of its cadres in light of the large number of unexpected and near-disastrous “mass incidents” in this critical Olympic year. For example, the low caliber of central and local officials has been demonstrated by the failure of those in five western provinces to either pre-empt or adequately handle the “Tibetan uprising” this spring (China Brief, May 13); the large number of "tofu," or shoddily constructed, school buildings exposed by the Sichuan earthquake (China Brief, June 4); and pervasive reports about collusion between police and underground gangs that was behind the riots in the provinces of Guizhou and Yunnan the past several weeks (China News Service, July 24; Xinhua News Agency, July 25). These disturbing incidents have notably stoked concerns among the party's top brass over shaken public confidence in the capabilities of the CCP.