

East-West Center in the News

(2012-01-21) "America matters to Asia in lots of ways beyond teacher training," it was highlighted including security. Though challenges such as "getting the right people" and producing a tailor-made programme, Dr Morrison assured that such challenges will not pose as a significant hurdle. "What we see is that there are a lot of resources that are available and the demand that is needed so I think this will be a very successful programme."
-- Also appears in: Borneo Bulletin Online

(2012-01-18) The new Japan Studies Fellowship, made possible by the generous support of the Japan Foundation Center for Global Partnership, comes at a critical time," said Satu Limaye, director of the EWC's Washington office. "As the U.S. pays more attention to Asia, the United States-Japan alliance is a bedrock for other initiatives and activities. With this Fellowship, the East-West Center is able to bring specialists on issues of relevance to the overall U.S.-Japan relationship to Washington to interact with the policy and expert community and publish policy-relevant work--building a new network of rising specialists who will engage and act to further the U.S.-Japan partnership."
-- Also appears in: Targeted News Service




(2012-01-30) "Both experts and casual readers will enjoy and learn from Bill Sharp's observations" - Ray Burghardt, Chair, American Institute in Taiwan, and Director, East-West Center, Hawaii.
-- Also appears in: American Banking News, PR.com, PRLog, PR-USA.net


(2012-01-30) Denny Roy, who is a senior fellow with the East-West Center, a Hawaii-based congressionally-funded think tank, said Friday that a potential military base in the Philippines should not be seen as an alternative to the Guam military buildup because the military does not have to choose one or the other.
However, if the Defense Department is able to push some of its Pacific forces into the Philippines, it could lessen the amount of military might that moves to Guam, Roy said.
"If the U.S. and Philippine governments decided to go ahead with a U.S. base or bases in the Philippines, it's possible this could take some of the burden off of Guam to host a lot more military facilities in the future," Roy said, adding later: "Probably (the Defense Department) would like to have both options and to use each for different purposes. But if this panned out, it's possible that some assets that would otherwise have been based on Guam could be based in the Philippines."
... In response, Roy said that American forces in the Philippines would have a "geographic advantage" of being close to the "potential flash points" of Taiwan and the South China Sea.
-- Also appears in: Association of Defense Communities


(2012-01-31) -- Also appears in: Dang Cong San Viet Nam, Targeted News Service, VN Express

(2012-02-02) It is difficult to give the Kyodo article proper weight because it is unclear who said it and why, said Denny Roy, an expert on Asian-Pacific military affairs. Roy is a senior fellow at the East-West Center, which is a federally funded think-tank in Hawaii.
In an interview with the Pacific Daily News, Roy explained that it is "very unlikely" that the Defense Department would make statements that so bluntly portray China as an adversary, so the Kyodo source is probably not a military official.
Even if they are, they are likely expressing a "disgruntled, minority view" fueled by frustration that it is not being followed, Roy said.
Roy also said it was not truly surprising that the Pentagon would at least consider Hawaii as an alternative.
"The military considers all kind of things that never see the light of day and would probably shock the average member of the American public," Roy said.
"You would think that, if the original problem was how do we lighten the burden on Okinawa, that several wide range possibilities would be considering, perhaps including Hawaii, unless it was felt that Hawaii is simply too far away," Roy said. ... ...

(2012-02-03) Denny Roy, who is a senior fellow at the East-West Center think-tank in Hawaii, said it is "very unlikely" that the anonymous source cited by Kyodo news service is a U.S. Department of Defense official.
... That doesn't sound like a military official, Roy said, because the military would be hesitant to bluntly portray China as an adversary. Even if the source is from the military, they are likely expressing a "disgruntled, minority view," Roy said.
... "The military considers all kind of things that never see the light of day and would probably shock the average member of the American public," Roy said.
"You would think that, if the original problem was how do we lighten the burden on Okinawa, that several wide range of possibilities would be considered, perhaps including Hawaii, unless it was felt that Hawaii is simply too far away," Roy said.

(2012-02-02) Click HERE to listen to audio
Denny Roy, a senior fellow with the Hawaii think tank, the East-West Centre, says if the Philippines plan becomes a reality it could lessen the burden from Guam "to host more military facilities in the future".
-- Also appears in: Pacific Beat







(2012-02-16) “The ‘repressed’ financial system means that households and corporations do not have many other options for investing their money besides the state banking system, which pays paltry interest. In a sense, the state banking system cheaply takes savings from households and companies and channels them to state-approved projects at low interest rates,” wrote in an email Dr. Christopher A. McNally, a political economist at Chaminade University, East-West Center, and the editor of “China’s Emergent Political Economy: Capitalism in the Dragon’s Lair” (2008).



(2012-02-17) "The reason for the recent prices is the problems of sanctions with Iran, the Iranians saying now they will sanction Europe," said Dr. Fereidun Fesharaki, a internationally noted energy expert at the East-West Center. "So it's given a jolt to the market. The price jumped a few dollars a barrel."... Fesharaki said we have adjusted to the higher prices, and will continue to adjust. "Two years ago, four dollars a gallon would have been a shocker. But now, kind of, people aren't happy, but they pay it."
