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foreign affairs
Books & Arts
The father of “soft power”
Graeme Dobell
28 March 2024
An eighty-year retrospective from the American academic who changed the way nations attract and argue
National Affairs
Shadow play
Tony Walker
21 March 2024
Both countries got what they wanted out of Wang Yi’s visit to Canberra
Books & Arts
Soeharto’s Australian whisperer
Hamish McDonald
21 March 2024
How a former Jehovah’s Witness activist became a secret intermediary between the Indonesian leader and the West
National Affairs
Spiky questions remain for AUKUS proponents
Sam Roggeveen
19 March 2024
There is an alternative, but the debate looks like taking some time to shift
National Affairs
Collateral damage
Hamish McDonald
15 February 2024
Yang Hengjun’s sentencing shows a Chinese security apparatus largely oblivious to foreign relations concerns
National Affairs
Gramsci’s message for Anthony Albanese
Frank Bongiorno
27 January 2024
How the government can build on what’s been a good month
International
Open season
Hamish McDonald
27 January 2024
Political opportunism seems set to follow the looting in Port Moresby
International
Scaling the Great Wall
Mark Baker
30 October 2023
Anthony Albanese’s visit to China late this week comes almost exactly fifty years after Gough Whitlam’s pioneering trip
National Affairs
Imelda Marcos’s videotapes
Mark Baker
24 October 2023
… and other encounters with Bill Hayden, foreign minister 1983–88
Correspondents
Taiwan’s double jeopardy
Antonia Finnane
12 October 2023
In Taipei, National Day tests the temperature of nationalist sentiment
Essays & Reportage
France’s stubborn grip
Hamish McDonald
5 October 2023
While the French president risks a new civil war just three hours’ flight from Australia, Canberra’s diplomacy remains muted
Books & Arts
An invasion’s long shadow
Tom Hyland
25 September 2023
An Iraqi journalist traces the creation of “one of the most corrupt nations on earth”
Essays & Reportage
Weaponising Pushkin
Kyle Wilson
4 September 2023
With monuments to Alexander Pushkin being removed all over Ukraine, the arrival of a bust of the poet in Canberra gains extra resonance
National Affairs
A pause in the thaw?
Hamish McDonald
27 June 2023
Signs suggest the warming of Australia–China relations has slowed to a glacial pace
National Affairs
Pink gin diplomacy
Hamish McDonald
4 May 2023
The government’s strategic review has left the commentariat puzzled
Books & Arts
Ambiguous embrace
Hamish McDonald
3 April 2023
Australia’s impassioned worries about China are in tension with better relations in the Pacific
International
The Quad couple: India and Australia
Robin Jeffrey
31 March 2023
Let’s start with the good news about Australia–India relations
National Affairs
Time to rethink the Morrison doctrine
Hamish McDonald
19 January 2023
Of all Scott Morrison’s poorly conceived initiatives, why has Labor stuck with AUKUS and its nuclear-powered submarines?
Essays & Reportage
Making up for lost time
Margaret Simons
1 November 2022
Penny Wong wants an Australia that’s more than just a supporting player in the grand drama of global geopolitics
Books & Arts
China’s greatest enemy
Kerry Brown
20 October 2022
Did Beijing set out to mislead the West about its intentions — and did it succeed?
Books & Arts
Scenes from a marriage
Nicholas Brown
3 October 2022
Two daughters profile a controversial father and an enigmatic mother against the backdrop of the growing bush capital
Books & Arts
Conquered by China
Graeme Dobell
26 October 2021
How a boy from the bush was seduced by the Asian giant
International
AUKUS disrupts “a very peaceful part of planet Earth”
Nic Maclellan
14 October 2021
With anti-nuclear sentiment on the rise across the islands, the Morrison government’s nuclear submarine ambitions have undercut the prime minister’s claim to be part of the…
International
Retro-nationalism’s vanquisher?
Hamish McDonald
15 September 2021
Japan’s Liberal Democrats face a choice between the past and the future
Essays & Reportage
Quiet Australian
Hamish McDonald
29 July 2021
Marise Payne has much to contend with as foreign minister in the Morrison government
Books & Arts
Beijing blackout
Mark Baker
21 May 2021
The departure of Australia’s last correspondents from Beijing has made a volatile situation worse
Books & Arts
The power and proximity of the dragon
Graeme Dobell
2 May 2021
How can Southeast Asian countries embrace China without being crushed?
National Affairs
Where the fight against Covid-19 will be won or lost
Adam Triggs
23 November 2020
Years of progress in reducing poverty will be wasted if we don’t change how financial markets treat developing countries during the pandemic
National Affairs
Higher authorities
Hamish McDonald
20 November 2020
Who is being helped by the continuing pressure on Bernard Collaery and Witness K?
National Affairs
The intelligence chief with the PM’s ear
Hamish McDonald
6 November 2020
Is Labor right to be worried by Scott Morrison’s choice to head the Office of National Intelligence?
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