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Emma Chanlett-Avery

Emma Chanlett-Avery

Emma Chanlett-Avery is director of political-security affairs at the Asia Society Policy Institute. She was a specialist in Asian affairs at the US Congressional Research Service for 20 years, with fellowships at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the Office of Policy Planning at the State Department. 
Emma Chanlett-Avery is director of political-security affairs at the Asia Society Policy Institute. She was a specialist in Asian affairs at the US Congressional Research Service for 20 years, with fellowships at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the Office of Policy Planning at the State Department. 
Languages Spoken:
English

Opinion | Will Trump’s economic tsunami undermine the US-Japan security partnership?

Tariff shocks have eroded the tentative confidence that the alliance was on a strong footing under Trump’s second administration.

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This year’s Shangri-La Dialogue tackled the world’s most acute security challenges, such as Ukraine, the Israel-Gaza war and South China Sea tensions. The prominence of global conflicts beyond the Indo-Pacific highlights how the US and China can no longer isolate different theatres of competition.

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China, Japan and South Korea will convene a long-delayed summit despite differences on global conflicts and the unlikelihood of fruitful trade talks. All three countries share a desire to stabilise the region, especially given potential uncertainties stemming from the coming US presidential election.

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US-China relationsJapanDiplomacy