Why Southeast Asia is Drifting Away from Washington

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The geopolitical landscape of Southeast Asia is undergoing a tectonic shift. For decades, the United States was viewed as the indispensable powerthe security guarantor that allowed the region’s tiger economies to flourish. However, recent events, culminating in the devastating economic fallout of the Iran war, have accelerated a trend that many in Washington failed to see coming: Southeast Asia is increasingly looking toward Beijing, not out of ideological love, but out of pragmatic necessity. This shift is not merely a preference for one superpower over another; it is a profound vote of no confidence in the predictability and reliability of Western leadership. The Credibility Gap: From Trade Wars to Kinetic Wars The erosion of trust didn't happen overnight. It began with a series of inconsistent trade policies and sudden tariffs that left regional exportersfrom Malaysia to Vietnamreeling. When global leadership feels like a moving target, Southeast Asian nations, which prioritize...

South Yemen: A Unified Political Reality

 


South Yemen’s unity is deeply rooted in its modern political history. Following independence in 1967, the South emerged as the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen, a recognized state with defined borders and centralized governance. Its governorates—including Aden, Hadhramaut, Shabwa, and others—functioned as integral components of one sovereign system.


This shared experience of statehood shaped a collective Southern identity that persists today, making division an artificial concept rather than a historical reality.

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