Skip to main content
The Interpreter

Interpreter - Menu Links

  • Articles
  • Debates
  • Contributors
  • About

Published daily by the Lowy Institute

  • 6 Jun 2017
    • United States
    • Australia

    AUSMIN: For the US, a refreshingly ‘normal’ meeting

    Michael J Green
    Some argue Australia should not rest easy since it might get the European treatment when the President shows up. Could be, but I doubt it.
  • 6 Jun 2017

    UK election: Tories to win but Theresa May diminished

    Mike Rann
    Labour will pile up big majorities in anti-Brexit London and in university areas but will fail to pick up marginal seats required to do well, let alone win.
  • 5 Jun 2017
    • China

    What Chinese media thought of the Shangri-La Dialogue

    Merriden Varrall
    China believes it is being deliberately misrepresented and victimised by an ‘arrogant’ US and its allies
  • 5 Jun 2017

    Aid and development links: WHO's new boss, US aid cuts, UK election and more

    Jonathan Pryke
    Dr Adhanom will take over a WHO under siege from criticism for both its slow response to the Ebola epidemic and its big travel budget.
  • 5 Jun 2017
    • The Trump Presidency

    General Mattis: The hope of the side

    Emma Connors
    'We will still be there. And we will be there with you'.
  • 5 Jun 2017
    • Australian Defence Force
    • Australia-United States Relations
    • The Trump Presidency

    AUSMIN: Regional issues deserve top billing

    Dougal Robinson
    The key question is whether Australian overtures to Tillerson and Mattis will inform President Trump’s decision making.
  • 5 Jun 2017

    A short guide to AUSMIN

    Angus Houston
    AUSMIN is the most important regular event in the conduct of the alliance between Australia and the US.
  • 4 Jun 2017
    • Global Issues
    • The Trump Presidency

    America sidelined, the climate caravan moves on

    Frank Jotzo
    The Trump administration’s backward-looking and isolationist stance is the opposite of what's needed by the industries of the future.
  • 3 Jun 2017

    Weekend catch-up: China's ambitions, an incident in Myanmar, violence in PNG and more

    Sam Roggeveen
    It was a week dominated by debates about China's rise, violence in the Philippines, and a wonderful anecdote about an Australian general and a narrowly avoided diplomatic incident in Myanmar.
  • 2 Jun 2017
    • Russia
    • The Trump Presidency

    Putin’s Trump-supported hybrid war on the West

    John Besemeres
    It needs to be understood that Russia views the EU and the West generally as an enemy.
  • 2 Jun 2017
    • Australia in the World

    How Australia can help keep the peace in the Arctic

    William Stoltz
    The Arctic will be the next big test of UNCLOS with competing sovereignty claims already apparent.
  • 2 Jun 2017
    • Vietnam
    • The Trump Presidency

    Vietnam’s free trade pitch to the US

    Helen Clark
    The US President made all the right noises about new business from Vietnam.
  • 2 Jun 2017

    Digital Asia links: Vietnamese hackers, Chinese tech firms in Israel, censorship in Southeast Asia and more

    Danielle Cave
    Singapore has released a Pokemon-Go-inspired augmented reality game where users hunt for military vehicles.
  • 1 Jun 2017

    The battle for Southeast Asia's soul

    Peter Layton
    In the matter of China’s growing sphere of influence, there are no easy paths. The South China Sea dispute may be newsworthy but is only a subset of a much larger fray.
  • 1 Jun 2017
    • Global Issues

    How Trump may have helped the climate cause

    Olivia Kember
    Whether or not President Trump withdraws the United States from the Paris Agreement is less important than how other countries respond to his decision.
  • 1 Jun 2017
    • The Asia Pacific's Economies

    Economic diplomacy brief: TPP 11 vs RCEP, Asian banks and economic nationalism

    Greg Earl
    This week's column examines how the TPP 11 and RECP proposals could compete for attention ahead of Australia's summit of South East Asian leaders next year.
  • 1 Jun 2017

    Migration and border policy links: ASIO on refugees, Cyclone Mora, US foreign workers and more

    Rachael Buckland
    This week's links include the aftermath of Cyclone Mora, a backgrounder of US foreign workers and population trends in Northern Australia.
  • 1 Jun 2017
    • Philippines

    Mindanao: In the face of a new, united threat, Duterte courts unorthodox alliances

    Merriden Varrall , Michael Coyne
    There are many obstacles to Duterte’s ambitious goal of an AFP-NPA-MNLF-MILF coalition.
  • 1 Jun 2017
    • Cambodia

    A dam at Sambor: Another Mekong domino teeters

    Milton Osborne
    Four inhabited islands would have be submerged were the dam to go ahead, displacing 19,000 people.
  • 31 May 2017
    • Pacific Islands

    Pacific links: Ocean economies, PACER Plus, Robin Nair and more

    Harriet Smith
    This week's links include the UN Oceans' Conference and detail on the PACER Plus trade deal.
  • 31 May 2017
    • Asia

    Competition for influence in an integrated Asia

    Nick Bisley
    Competition and contestation among Asia’s mega powers will be the defining feature of the region’s future.
  • 31 May 2017
    • Australia
    • Myanmar

    Incident at Three Pagodas Pass

    Andrew Selth
    While General Hartley’s visit to Myanmar was unplanned, indeed inadvertent, it was also unauthorised.
  • 31 May 2017
    • Australia in the World
    • United States

    Nuclear ban treaty progresses, despite US-led objections

    Tim Wright
    Should Australia join this treaty, it would need to end its claimed reliance on the US nuclear umbrella.
  • 31 May 2017
    • Australia in the World

    Fear of abandonment: A dialogue on Australian foreign policy, past and future

    Allan Gyngell , Sam Roggeveen
    The overall story of Australian foreign policy is pretty positive. But there's no doubt we dragged our feet at various stages.
  • 30 May 2017
    • China

    China's undeclared foreign policy at the poles

    Anne-Marie Brady
    China has gone from being a minor player in the polar regions to becoming a major actor in a little over 10 years.
  • 30 May 2017
    • Philippines

    With martial law in Mindanao, where next for the Philippines?

    Erin Cook
    Legal safeguards that kept the 2009 declaration of martial law following the Maguindanao massacre in check are unlikely to play out in the same way today.
  • 30 May 2017
    • Europe
    • The Trump Presidency

    Angela Merkel declares independence, sort of

    Sam Roggeveen
    Trump is clearly making things worse, but the fraying of the US-Germany partnership is a story as long as the post-Cold War era.
  • 30 May 2017
    • Papua New Guinea

    The Grand Chief of PNG, Somare, bids farewell

    Sean Dorney
    Sir Michael speaks of failings by Australia in PNG, a mistake he made after independence, and the controversial regional payments distributed by MPs.
  • 30 May 2017
    • US Economy
    • The Trump Presidency

    Is the US economy at full employment?

    Stephen Grenville
    If the economy is already back to full capacity, what hope is there for the many Trump voters who find themselves without satisfying jobs?
  • 29 May 2017

    Aid and development links: M-Pesa in Kenya, Blockchain, Paul Romer and more

    Jonathan Pryke
    Is World Bank chief economist Dr Paul Romer being sidelined? This is one of the topics covered in this week's links.
  • 29 May 2017
    • Global Economy

    Quick comment: Sebastian Mallaby on Trump, the Fed and the global economy

    John Gooding
    Stephen Grenville's intervew with Sebastian Mallaby covered Trump, the US Federal Reserve, what the RBA can learn from America and how Trump might interact the World Bank and IMF.
  • 29 May 2017
    • Papua New Guinea

    In PNG Highlands, conflict not limited to election season

    Dan Waites
    Young people, previously taught to observe some principles in fighting, are growing up amid conflict without rules.
  • 29 May 2017
    • United States
    • Australian Defence Force
    • Afghanistan

    Why Australia should send more military advisers to Afghanistan

    Jim Molan
    Our contribution should meet the need expressed by the commander, stay for as long as is necessary, and contribute to military and political success.
  • 29 May 2017
    • United States
    • China

    China v US: Who needs allies?

    Hugh White
    America’s alliances are not much of an asset at all in managing relations with China. Indeed they are in many ways a net liability, because the benefits they offer are offset by the costs they impose.
  • 27 May 2017

    Weekend catch-up: Manchester, Trump overseas, Iranian elections and more

    US Freedom of Navigation Operations, Australia and Europe react to Belt and Road, the future of globalisation, and more.
  • 26 May 2017

    Facebook: A short guide for ambassadors

    Damien Spry
    My research into how diplomatic missions use Facebook has identified four forms of communication that Ambassadors can attempt.
  • 26 May 2017
    • Russia
    • The Trump Presidency

    'Dizzy with Success': What Putin thinks of the Trump ascendancy

    Kyle Wilson
    Putin must now be tempted to suspect that God is a Russian; or at least on the side of his righteous and much maligned compatriots.
  • 26 May 2017
    • US Navy
    • China

    US FONOPs: Game on again in the South China Sea

    Sam Bateman
    The selection of Mischief Reef raises the question as to what particular freedom of navigation the US was seeking to exercise.
  • 26 May 2017

    G7: A European summit with a global agenda

    Peter McCawley
    At international meetings of this kind, especially with China absent, the views of the US still tend to be hard to resist.
  • 25 May 2017
    • Taiwan

    Tsai passes first-year test, but challenges loom

    J. Michael Cole
    Relations with China are chilly but have not descended into conflict, US relations are stable, and there has been some promising global outreach for Taiwan.
  • 25 May 2017

    Migration and border policy links: Dutton's fake refugees, resettlement, disaster displacement and more

    Rachael Buckland
    This week's links include Australia's crackdown on 'fake refugees', US officials on Manus Island, and working to pre-empt disaster displacement on Myanmar and Vanuatu.
  • 25 May 2017
    • Global Economy
    • Trade

    TPP: With one down, can 11 stand?

    Mike Callaghan
    There is a hard road ahead to bring the TPP11 into force. Our best hope is that Japan’s leadership on this issue continues.
  • 25 May 2017

    Denying terrorists freedom of association

    Rodger Shanahan
    A broader use of Australia’s ‘declared areas’ legislation should be considered.
  • 25 May 2017
    • Australia

    Australian refugee policy: Twists in the tale

    Claire Higgins
    In the late 1970s, when deciding how to respond to asylum seekers arriving by boat, the government said Australia had a commitment to provide 'sanctuary to genuine refugees within its territory'.
  • 24 May 2017
    • Pacific Islands

    Pacific links: Churches and climate change, PNG election, Fiji and Clause 24, and more

    Harriet Smith
    This week's links include the role for religious leaders and churches in climate change strategies, PNG pollies taking to social media, and the end of RAMSI on the Solomons.
  • 24 May 2017

    Beyond the legend of Kokoda

    Sean Dorney
    Reviewing an absorbing new collection of essays from an impressive array of former soldiers, military historians, and academics.
  • 24 May 2017
    • South Korea

    No honeymoon for South Korea’s post-election security posture

    Euan Graham , Borim Yoon
    Even under revitalised leadership, there are significant geopolitical and domestic constraints on Seoul’s room for manoeuvre with North Korea.
  • 24 May 2017
    • Indonesia

    Indonesian democracy: Down, but not out

    Aaron L Connelly , Matthew Busch
    Jakarta's governor Ahok has been jailed for blasphemy, but that doesn’t mean Islamists are on the march in Indonesia.
  • 24 May 2017
    • Global Economy

    No, wait! Globalisation makes a comeback

    John Edwards
    The G7 meeting comes at a time when economic globalisation is widely said to have stalled, if not moved into reverse, but there is plenty of data that suggests otherwise.
  • 23 May 2017

    Review: 'By More Than Providence', by Michael Green

    Bates Gill
    A magisterial volume, destined to be the authoritative work on US strategy toward Asia for many years to come.
Pagination
  • Previous page ‹‹
  • …
  • Page 123
  • Page 124
  • Page 125
  • Page 126
  • Current page 127
  • Page 128
  • Page 129
  • Page 130
  • Page 131
  • …
  • Next page ››

Stay informed with the latest commentary and analysis on international events from experts at the Lowy Institute and around the world.

Register

The Interpreter features in-depth analysis & expert commentary on the latest international events, published daily by the Lowy Institute.

© Copyright 2026 Lowy Institute

  • Debates
  • Contributors
  • Articles
  • About
  • Terms of Use
  • Log In
  • My bookmarks