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http://www.<strong>cfr</strong>.org/project/1411/asia_and_<strong>the</strong>_world_roundtable_series.html<br />

• March 2009—Present<br />

Asia and <strong>the</strong> World Roundtable Series<br />

Director: Evan A. Feigenbaum, Senior Fellow for East, Central, and South Asia<br />

The Asia and <strong>the</strong> World Roundtable Series examines <strong>the</strong> global implications of <strong>the</strong><br />

rise of Asian power. For a thousand <strong>years</strong>, Asia was <strong>the</strong> engine of <strong>the</strong> global<br />

economy, a locus of science and innovation, a center of ideas and intellectual<br />

ferment, and <strong>the</strong> nexus of global power. After a long hiatus, Asia's major powers<br />

have now reemerged on <strong>the</strong> global stage, but <strong>the</strong>ir interaction with one ano<strong>the</strong>r, and<br />

with <strong>the</strong> United States, on important issues and challenges is unsettled and<br />

evolving. Speakers and participants analyze <strong>the</strong> reemergence of China and India as<br />

global players, <strong>the</strong> changing role of Japan on <strong>the</strong> international stage, and efforts to<br />

reshape <strong>the</strong> international architecture to accommodate <strong>the</strong> rise of China and India,<br />

in particular. Sessions also consider <strong>the</strong> ways in which greater involvement in <strong>the</strong><br />

world, not just <strong>the</strong>ir immediate neighborhood, is changing <strong>the</strong> strategic, economic,<br />

and political calculations of major countries in East, Central, and South Asia.<br />

Meetings look at <strong>the</strong> tensions, opportunities, and constraints that will determine<br />

whe<strong>the</strong>r and how <strong>the</strong> United States can forge partnerships with major Asian powers<br />

on issues of global scope. O<strong>the</strong>r sessions may examine timely issues that arise in<br />

Central Asia, such as connections to <strong>the</strong> international oil and gas market,<br />

international institutions, and <strong>the</strong> global economy.<br />

[undated article below]<br />

The reader should bear in mind that, although this article explains <strong>the</strong><br />

"U.S./British Connection", England has been under economic and<br />

political control of <strong>the</strong> Rothschild money trust for centuries.<br />

Without that understanding, <strong>the</strong> subject of <strong>the</strong> US/British connection serves to create<br />

confusion as to WHO or WHAT is behind those individuals, groups, societies, etc. which,<br />

- while not well known to <strong>the</strong> general population - are somewhat more visible.<br />

A clue is given in <strong>the</strong> statement: "The money to found <strong>the</strong> CFR came in part from J.P.<br />

Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, Bernard Baruch, Otto Kahn, Jacob Schiff and Paul<br />

Warburg".

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