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Showing posts from March, 2024

The Ugly Face of Global Technology Politics

Yuba Nath Lamsal: The multi-front geopolitical tussle between the United States and China has surfaced more forcefully with the Biden Administration seeking to confront Beijing in the technological theater. In a not-so-surprising move, the US House of Representatives, the lower chamber of parliament, overwhelmingly passed a bill on March 14 that may eventually lead to the banning of the Chinese social media application TikTok. ‘The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act’ is yet to take the form of law as it still awaits Senate approval and the president’s endorsement. President Joe Biden has already given a nod to sign once the bill comes to his table. However, the bill’s fate is uncertain as the Senate remains non-committal so far. The bill seeks ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, to sell its shares within six months or face a ban in the United States. TikTok is a powerful social media site with over a billion users worldwide and 170 million in th

Delicate Handling Of Foreign Affairs

Yuba Nath Lamsal: We live in an era of history’s most critical juncture. The heightened geopolitical contestation among great powers has sounded worldwide alarm with fear of escalation of conflicts in various trouble spots. Even a slightest miscalculation may provoke war. Ukraine is the latest example of how a country that fails to read the mood and mind of powerful neighbour lands in trouble. While Ukraine war is fundamentally Vladimir Putin’s making by brazenly invading a small and sovereign neighbour. However, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, too, is partially responsible as he failed to gauze the intention and interest of big and powerful neighbour. Kyiv under Zelenskyy moved too close to the Western security alliance and sought NATO membership, which Russia took as a serious threat to its national security. Zelenskyy’s hyper nationalism and Putin’s ego caused irreparable damage to both the countries. The war has already dragged on to the third year and there is no sign o

Significance Of China’s Two Sessions

Yuba Nath Lamsal Mark Twain has said ‘history does not repeat itself but it often rhymes’. In the history of human civilisation, events have often reoccurred but not in exactly similar fashion. In the international order and geopolitics, history has, so far, not repeated but rhymed. The wheel of history continues to roll with triumphs and tumults. In the course of time since human civilization began, several empires rose and fell. The structure of global order, too, has continued to change and taken different shapes. The unipolar world order that came into being after the collapse of the Soviet Union has now crumbled. The bipolar world order is brewing with China rising almost neck and neck with the United States as a super power. According to Lowy Institute’s Global Diplomacy Index 2024, while United States has ‘edge over China in Americas, Europe and South Asia, China is ahead in Africa, East Asia and the Pacific’. Both these powers are in the race of enlarging their influence