Few Americans today outside foreign-policy circles will have heard of Kishore Mahbubani, a 75-year-old retired Singaporean diplomat who is a household name in his own country and in much of Southeast ...
Join us for a special conversation with Ambassador Kishore Mahbubani on the occasion of his latest book, Living the Asian Century: An Undiplomatic Memoir. Ambassador Mahbubani has distinguished ...
Singapore's former ambassador to the United Nations, Kishore Mahbubani -- who attended the first APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting in 1993 -- recently returned to the city. He approached Shenzhen, which ...
While U.S. President Donald Trump is in theory "very negative on China," in practice, he may be willing to do "a big trade deal" with the country, according to veteran Singapore diplomat Kishore ...
Veteran Singapore diplomat Kishore Mahbubani warned against undestimating former President Donald Trump: "Trump is crazy but he’s not mad." U.S. voters will head to the polls in just over 24 hours in ...
As the new powers - China, India, Africa - rise to the top of the world's pecking order, how should the West react? Kishore Mahbubani argues passionately and provocatively that the West can no longer ...
For years former diplomat and academic, Kishore Mahbubani, has studied the changing relationship between Asia and the U.S. in works like Can Asians Think? and The New Asian Hemisphere. In The Great ...
In 1910, the British writer Norman Angell published "The Great Illusion," a best-selling book whose principal argument went down in history for how wrong it was. Angell argued that because of growing ...
Goossen noted that the title of Mahbubani’s recent book is thought-provoking, even a little provocative, and said he wondered whether that was Mahbubani’s intent while writing it. Mahbubani responded ...
News report from South: "When I came to Zhuhai, I must say it was a mind-blowing experience." That was how Kishore Mahbubani, ...
In his new book, Professor Kishore Mahbubani, a Dean at the National University of Singapore, compares the world’s 192 countries to cabins on one boat, without a single captain. That’s not good. He ...