(India) rather claims to be another pole in a bigger, multipolar world order – and not in a bipolar one between China and the US
Media mentions – Asia
The memorandum signed a few days ago represents the first, real, sign of Italy’s involvement in the Saudi energy transition
The global economic costs would be enormous. We must reflect over worst-case scenarios, in order to prevent them
Contrary to how it may appear to many, not least in the US, the new cold war seems to be based not on the old logic of polarization, but on a new logic of fragmentation
Policymakers are under pressure. We therefore urgently need a public debate that increases understanding of how to reduce dependencies.
Although there is lively debate on the war in Ukraine —more than one would perhaps expect— the Chinese are thinking about it very differently from people in the west
Mark Leonard and Alicja Bachulska’s op-ed in Chinese perception of the war in Ukraine
I think EU member states are not clear about what the risks are and how big those risks are, so there is quite a bit of demand for a better understanding of the data and evidence
Four of the members — China, Russia, India and Pakistan — are nuclear powers and Moscow sees the group as the core of a China- and Russian-led anti-western bloc
A study from ECFR explains China’s attempts to reduce Western influence through multilateral organisations
It would be a misconception that we are dealing with a temporary crisis of our relations and economic changes in China. The status quo ante will not return.
Ukraine’s best-case scenario for the end of this war is also China’s worst-case scenario. Beijing fears regime change in Moscow and its potential security implications for China