While there have been highlights in her career as secretary, the job covers a full range of duties, big and small. As Clinton put it, she has to follow "the headlines and the trend lines." Here, Clinton looks at a statue as she tours the Acropolis Museum in Athens on July 17, 2011, before signing an agreement to combat the illegal trade in Greek antiquities that have frequently turned up at foreign museums.
While there have been highlights in her career as secretary, the job covers a full range of duties, big and small. As Clinton put it, she has to follow "the headlines and the trend lines." Here, Clinton looks at a statue as she tours the Acropolis Museum in Athens on July 17, 2011, before signing an agreement to combat the illegal trade in Greek antiquities that have frequently turned up at foreign museums.
While there have been highlights in her career as secretary, the job covers a full range of duties, big and small. As Clinton put it, she has to follow "the headlines and the trend lines."
Here, Clinton looks at a statue as she tours the Acropolis Museum in Athens on July 17, 2011, before signing an agreement to combat the illegal trade in Greek antiquities that have frequently turned up at foreign museums.
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While there have been highlights in her career as secretary, the job covers a full range of duties, big and small. As Clinton put it, she has to follow "the headlines and the trend lines." Here, Clinton looks at a statue as she tours the Acropolis Museum in Athens on July 17, 2011, before signing an agreement to combat the illegal trade in Greek antiquities that have frequently turned up at foreign museums.
The war in Ukraine has propelled the United States and Europe closer on a variety of foreign-policy issues. But do Washington and Brussels agree on how to deal with Beijing’s growing clout...Show more?
The signs are mixed. The trans-Atlantic alliance NATO has formally declared China a strategic threat, but there are also emerging gaps in how various European capitals and Washington want to engage with Beijing. What exactly are these differences, and how will they impact the world’s relations with China?
Join FP’s Ravi Agrawal for a discussion with experts on both sides of the Atlantic: Cindy Yu, an assistant editor of the Spectator and host of its podcast Chinese Whispers; and James Palmer, author of FP’s weekly China Brief newsletter. FP subscribers can send in their questions in advance.
While there have been highlights in her career as secretary, the job covers a full range of duties, big and small. As Clinton put it, she has to follow "the headlines and the trend lines." Here, Clinton looks at a statue as she tours the Acropolis Museum in Athens on July 17, 2011, before signing an agreement to combat the illegal trade in Greek antiquities that have frequently turned up at foreign museums.
Over the last few years, the United States has moved to limit China’s technological rise. U.S.-led sanctions have imposed unprecedented limits on Beijing’s access to advanced computing c...Show morehips. In response, China has accelerated its own efforts to develop its technological industry and reduce its dependence on external imports.
According to Dan Wang, a technology expert and visiting scholar at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center, China’s tech competitiveness is grounded in manufacturing capabilities. And sometimes China’s strategy beats America’s.
Where is this new tech war headed? How are other countries being impacted as a result? In what ways are they reassessing their relationships with the world’s largest economic superpowers? Join FP’s Ravi Agrawal in conversation with Wang for a discussion about China’s technological rise and whether U.S. actions can really stop it.
While there have been highlights in her career as secretary, the job covers a full range of duties, big and small. As Clinton put it, she has to follow "the headlines and the trend lines." Here, Clinton looks at a statue as she tours the Acropolis Museum in Athens on July 17, 2011, before signing an agreement to combat the illegal trade in Greek antiquities that have frequently turned up at foreign museums.
For decades, the U.S. foreign-policy establishment has made the assumption that India could serve as a partner as the United States jostles with China for power in the Indo-Pacific region. B...Show moreut Ashley J. Tellis, a longtime watcher of U.S.-India relations, says that Washington’s expectations of New Delhi are misplaced.
In a widely read Foreign Affairs essay, Tellis makes the case that the White House should recalibrate its expectations of India. Is Tellis right?
Send in your questions for an in-depth discussion with Tellis and FP Live host Ravi Agrawal ahead of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the White House on June 22.
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