Gideon Rachman’s last detail

Gideon Rachman blogs about his travels to Singapore and Beijing. You should read the whole thing, but I can’t resist excerpting how he closes this post: The question of how peaceful China?s rise will be was… the subject of our seminar in Singapore, organised by the Brookings Institution and the Lee Kuan Yew school of ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

Gideon Rachman blogs about his travels to Singapore and Beijing. You should read the whole thing, but I can't resist excerpting how he closes this post: The question of how peaceful China?s rise will be was... the subject of our seminar in Singapore, organised by the Brookings Institution and the Lee Kuan Yew school of public policy. Generally speaking, the Americans were pretty wary, the Asians pretty sanguine and the Europeans faintly bemused.... Certainly history suggests that the rise of a big new power is often a fairly fraught affair. I was indirectly reminded of this, when I went to have lunch in Beijing with Richard McGregor and Mure Dickie of the FT. Richard had thoughtfully bought me a present: a pirated DVD of Leni Riefenstahl?s ?Triumph of the Will?, which he had picked up for a dollar in a local market. It?s good to know that the Chinese are so interested in European history.

Gideon Rachman blogs about his travels to Singapore and Beijing. You should read the whole thing, but I can’t resist excerpting how he closes this post:

The question of how peaceful China?s rise will be was… the subject of our seminar in Singapore, organised by the Brookings Institution and the Lee Kuan Yew school of public policy. Generally speaking, the Americans were pretty wary, the Asians pretty sanguine and the Europeans faintly bemused…. Certainly history suggests that the rise of a big new power is often a fairly fraught affair. I was indirectly reminded of this, when I went to have lunch in Beijing with Richard McGregor and Mure Dickie of the FT. Richard had thoughtfully bought me a present: a pirated DVD of Leni Riefenstahl?s ?Triumph of the Will?, which he had picked up for a dollar in a local market. It?s good to know that the Chinese are so interested in European history.

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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