■ INSIDE: EDUCATION
A World of News and Perspective
AND TRAVEL & HOTELS SPECIAL SECTIONS
EDUCATION ■ A Special Section of The Washington Diplomat
Yi n Yang
■ October 2012
and
■ WWW.WASHDIPLOMAT.COM
■ VOLUME 19, NUMBER 10 UNITED STATES
Foreign Policy Enters Race for U.S. Presidency The world is paying close attention to the U.S. presidential race, but that doesn’t mean American voters are necessarily devoting much attention to world affairs, given their preoccupation with the stagnant economy. But as the anti-American protests in the Mideast dramatically show, the world has a way of commandeering attention. PAGE 12
Qatar: arab ascension
Qatar’s new ambassador in Washington, Mohamed Abdulla Al-Rumaihi, says his tiny emirate is using its huge energy wealth to “create a model for the
UNITED STATES
At first glance, foreign policy appears to be neither Joe Biden nor Paul Ryan’s strong suit. But both vice presidential picks do harbor strong views on U.S. engagement with the world — reflecting and influencing their boss’s ambitions. PAGE 13
So far, that model is standing
“Nomads and Networks” traces the evolution of a complex society that debunks misperceptions of the nomad as an aimless wanderer. PAGE 52
government officials who grew up in the difficult years of the Great Famine and the Cultural Revolution. Neither of his parents had a good high school education,
nor did they attend college, although both acquired degrees later in life.
PEOPLE OF WORLD INFLUENCE His parents wanted his own schooling to be better, Wan said. So they bought children’s books for him, subscribed to every magazine imaginable, supported him in his studies, and talked to his
teachers.
When Wan developed a love of math in high school, his father wanted him to pursue something practical such as engineering, but his mother per-
suaded him to allow Wan to go for what he describes as his “passion”: physics.
All Quiet on Western Front For Jacobson George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs
Continued on next page
■ INSIDE: The Meridian International
October 2012
Center is taking exchange to
a new level. PAGE 36 ■ Move over football and basketball.
Here comes rugby and cricket.
PAGE 40 ■
EDUCATION
The Washington Diplomat
Page29
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
up to the turmoil buffeting the
Anti-American Protests May Sideline Syria
region, with Qatar precariously positioned as a major global player sandwiched between powerful neighbors. PAGE 19
culture
Ancient Nomads Left Sophisticated Footprint
■ OCTOBER 2012
Yuan Wan is the son of Chinese
As assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, Roberta Jacobson’s portfolio includes Venezuela and Cuba, perpetual thorns in America’s side, but this longtime civil servant says she’s very lucky that the three dozen or so nations under her jurisdiction enjoy unprecedented peace and prosperity. PAGE 6
entire Middle East.”
Presidential Veeps Offer Up Their Own Foreign Policy Visions
by Carolyn Cosmos
U.S.-China Partnership Marked By Collaboration, Competition
The deaths of four Americans in a vicious attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi may have inadvertently killed any chance that the U.S. will stick its neck out to arm Syria’s rebels, some of whom may turn their guns against their Western backers. PAGE 8 ADVERTISEMENT
NOVEMBER 13, 2012 RITZ-CARLTON HOTEL WASHINGTON D.C. WWW.WASHDIPLOMAT.COM/EVENTS/CPSCONFERENCE2012
LIMITED FREE TICKETS FOR FOREIGN DIPLOMATS • SEE AD ON PAGE 11