取り急ぎ標記につき貼っておきます。
日本
Another date at Mar-a-Lago: Will Abe and Trump go steady? (04/16/2018) | Mireya Solís @BrooingsInst
North Korea. Tariffs. Scoring domestic political points.
RAND's Jeffrey Hornung discusses what's at stake for Trump and Abe during this week's U.S.-Japan summit: https://t.co/gfvn0Wlx5j
— RAND Corporation (@RANDCorporation) April 18, 2018
Japan is the United States' fourth biggest trading partner and a key military ally https://t.co/X5H6eB682K
— CNN International (@cnni) April 17, 2018
It’s Trump/Abe day! Wondering why Abe is here or what’s at stake? @dandeluce and I have a @ForeignPolicy piece for you! https://t.co/3oIyZhvvVV
— Emily Tamkin (@emilyctamkin) April 17, 2018
Japanese President Abe will meet with US President Trump this week, preparing for conversation between the US and North Korea. Other key global events this month in our list: https://t.co/BtwLj1EJOV
— Intl Peace Institute (@ipinst) April 17, 2018
Japan's Shinzo Abe comes to Mar-a-Lago this week ready to renew the vows of a special bond. But whether Trump will reciprocate his enthusiasm is an open question, argues @solis_msolis: https://t.co/dIPIhOEXIn pic.twitter.com/uF0OMXggyC
— Brookings FP (@BrookingsFP) April 17, 2018
How to strengthen defense trade cooperation between the U.S. and Japan: https://t.co/hzSQIHT6ZH
— Hudson Institute (@HudsonInstitute) March 28, 2018
President Trump and Prime Minister Abe’s third summit will take place amid uncertainty on the degree to which Abe and Trump are strategically aligned on North Korea and trade policy. https://t.co/fKjngu8MCV
— CSIS (@CSIS) April 17, 2018
“There is a thin line between a positive and negative reinforcement cycle in the politics of bilateral relations, and navigating this successfully is part of the challenge facing Trump and Abe this week,” says @SchoffJ and Feng Lin.https://t.co/VNuVbElOX6 pic.twitter.com/EOjRbFCc03
— Carnegie Endowment (@CarnegieEndow) April 16, 2018
Japanese PM Shinzo Abe heads to Mar-a-Lago this week. So far, his aggressive outreach to Trump has not yielded concrete gains for Japan. https://t.co/eViabu8HNN
— WorldPoliticsReview (@WPReview) April 16, 2018
Tensions over North Korea and trade will test ties between President Trump and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan when they meet today https://t.co/178B4wapKA
— The New York Times (@nytimes) April 17, 2018
After publicly flirting last week with having the United States rejoin the Trans-Pacific Partnership, President Trump appeared to rebuff the idea once and for all https://t.co/3PA1zYC4JO
— The New York Times (@nytimes) April 18, 2018
Pompeo meets Kim, Trump meets Abe. Could the DMZ actually demilitarize? Will US rejoining TPP ever be other than “a thought”? read @MarkLandler https://t.co/J0P96vu99S
— Motoko Rich (@motokorich) April 18, 2018
Trump, Japan’s Abe work on strengthening ties — but also change them after awkward coincidence https://t.co/VRnkyd0oLl
— Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 18, 2018
U.S.-China trade dispute looms over Trump’s summit with Japan’s Abe https://t.co/Oh8kruia7x
— Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 17, 2018
As Prime Minister Abe begins talks w/@POTUS in Florida, this @WhiteHouse Fact Sheet outlines work that has been done to this point on issues including maintaining maximum pressure on N. Korea, building investment ties, & return of abductees from N. Korea. https://t.co/GbkaubgAI3
— Japan Embassy DC (@JapanEmbDC) April 17, 2018
Britain sends third warship to Asia-Pacific to monitor North Korea https://t.co/OjkDnIWLtF #Scotland pic.twitter.com/9U36gMRQUz
— NEWSONSCOTLAND (@NewsOnScotland) April 11, 2018
President Trump expressed interest in possibly re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership to top officials today. Why now, and how does this play into the recent trade clashes with China? @philipilevy lays out the key questions in @forbes https://t.co/DjgCpVxp78
— The Chicago Council (@ChicagoCouncil) April 12, 2018
There are some big reasons why Trump should reconsider joining TPP, but proposing major changes like what his team did for NAFTA means the offer would be D.O.A: dead on arrival. https://t.co/HtjzU4u7LI pic.twitter.com/1epGomwCGz
— Peterson Institute (@PIIE) April 13, 2018
The Trump-Abe Summit: More Than Meets the Eye https://t.co/pmbBMEotSr
— The Diplomat (@Diplomat_APAC) April 17, 2018
Japan’s Multi-Layered, Multilateral Strategy https://t.co/oxSFxM4u6g
— The Diplomat (@Diplomat_APAC) April 18, 2018
#Japan Air Self Defense Force: Intercepts Down 23 Percent https://t.co/vnJzE24qV7
— The Diplomat (@Diplomat_APAC) April 17, 2018
Japan Destroyer in the Philippines Amid Big Maritime Week https://t.co/org0xb0n2c
— The Diplomat (@Diplomat_APAC) April 16, 2018
Are #India and #Japan About to Conclude a $1.3 Billion Military Aircraft Deal?https://t.co/ZWkOPFxPfG @Diplomat_APAC
— Franz-Stefan Gady (@HoansSolo) April 17, 2018
President Trump wants back in the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact. But will he be welcomed? https://t.co/7eGwH0bvB2
— Foreign Policy (@ForeignPolicy) April 17, 2018
Can Abenomics reinvigorate Japan’s economy? https://t.co/fYKgVPIQgj
— CFR (@CFR_org) April 17, 2018
President Trump has renewed his attack on TPP, just days after raising the possibility of the United States rejoining it https://t.co/GqpmIO5JYf
— CNN International (@cnni) April 18, 2018
The BOJ may get more freedom on policy if Abe quits, according to this former central bank board member https://t.co/9585Kt4d6z pic.twitter.com/ylDou5p8ST
— Bloomberg (@business) April 18, 2018
ほか
These are the stocks to buy if the two Koreas reunify, according to Nomura https://t.co/aSNYadknE0 pic.twitter.com/Eqzh5fatHz
— Bloomberg (@business) April 18, 2018
Here are 9 potential locations for the Trump-Kim summit https://t.co/U3LWOfZGRG pic.twitter.com/mvCnHLJ0ca
— Bloomberg Asia (@BloombergAsia) April 18, 2018
Definition of a true "win-win" situation: #Taiwan diversifies trade relations away from dependence on #China to avoid economic downturn, while #India receives investment & irks Beijing in retaliation for Chinese moves in #IndianOcean region. https://t.co/VH2gFg5wek
— Derek J. Grossman (@DerekJGrossman) April 18, 2018
Balloons loaded with contraband and sent into #NorthKorea could be made more reliable at little cost if launch conditions were chosen more carefully. New report: https://t.co/yy5pSOWdUI
— RAND Corporation (@RANDCorporation) April 18, 2018
There are many reasons to doubt Trump's ability to make a deal with North Korea. But studying the Iran nuclear accord would increase his odds, Peter Harrell writes.https://t.co/ubx5hC1ps4
— Foreign Policy (@ForeignPolicy) April 17, 2018
Kim Jong Un Planning Formal Nod to #Denuclearization; #Japan and #China Have 'Different Economic Visions Despite Common Free Trade Goal'; ANALYSIS. Why the Trump-Kim Talks Will Fail https://t.co/wuIdnH91gM #AsiaPacificNews #WorldAffairs #TrumpKimSummit #NuclearNegotiations
— World Affairs (@WAJournal) April 17, 2018
How will South Korean policy affect the US? Szalontai says, "Despite the concerns of American observers who questioned Moon’s loyalty to Washington, the recent reorientation of #Seoul’s foreign policy has been directed more against Japan than the US." https://t.co/4SDQWRMmCs
— Global Observatory (@ipinstGO) April 17, 2018
North Korea is allowing South Korean officials to cross the border in order to finalize the organization of the upcoming summit, @Reuters → https://t.co/oRuxcwR9Be
— Scowcroft Center (@ACScowcroft) April 17, 2018
Unpacking the threat posed by China, Russia, Iran and North Korea to U.S. space military capabilities. https://t.co/K9vyHsDZzd pic.twitter.com/7op6bnK2iP
— CSIS (@CSIS) April 17, 2018
The Chinese-North Korean relationship is often shrouded in mystery, says @Georgetown’s Thomas Banchoff. We’ll try to demystify it today. #ChinaGUUSIP https://t.co/pjOdnvYOsc
— U.S. Institute of Peace (@USIP) April 17, 2018
Russia is back on the global stage. But as it prepares to go head-to-head with the US in Syria, has it overplayed its hand? @pstronski of the @CarnegieEndow on the return of “Global Russia.” #InevitableAdversaries?
See more from our US-Russia project at https://t.co/WCufYqtjwe pic.twitter.com/lUKq9KPYXb
— EGF (@EGFound) April 17, 2018
NEW: 56% support summit between Pres. Trump and Kim Jong Un, per @ABC News/WaPo poll, though two-thirds say the meeting is unlikely to lead to North Korea giving up its nuclear weapons. https://t.co/HA2mumvYhj pic.twitter.com/wLFkxX9zeP
— ABC News (@ABC) April 17, 2018
According to author, Balázs Szalontai, "#NorthKorea probably expected that an improvement in inter-Korean relations would lessen Beijing’s willingness to enforce sanctions, since China traditionally prefers negotiations over pressure." More insight: https://t.co/ymwvarKWSB
— Intl Peace Institute (@ipinst) April 15, 2018
.@noltjim argues that while both #XiJinping and #DonaldTrump believe they hold the moral, political, & economic high ground in the looming U.S.-China trade conflict, Trump is the more vulnerable: https://t.co/stUWjNVtMq
— World Policy (@WorldPolicy) April 12, 2018
Even if China has more to lose economically than the US in a potential trade war, "there is no way on earth China can be seen to be kowtowing to the U.S.," says @philipilevy in the @washingtonpost @byHeatherLong https://t.co/MN3gBlVmwh
— The Chicago Council (@ChicagoCouncil) April 10, 2018
"Globalists everywhere should be openly supporting Trump’s 'China correction,' not wishing that he fails," argues our Indermit Gill in the @BrookingsInst Future Development blog. @DukeDCID https://t.co/Nh7kmGduLx
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) April 11, 2018
Are the U.S. and China's tit-for-tat-tariffs really about trade or a battle for global pre-eminence in innovation? https://t.co/sv5LXyl3H1
— Yale Insights (@YaleInsights) April 13, 2018
John Lipsky @KissingerCenter & @FPI_SAIS joined @BloombergTV to discuss the issues behind the U.S.-China trade dispute and China's 2025 economic plans. https://t.co/VvIN3zHjAT
— Johns Hopkins | SAIS (@SAISHopkins) April 17, 2018
Trump's tariffs will do nothing to improve America’s external balance, output, employment, or real wages, says @JFrankelEcon https://t.co/KGwLj0M0Lz
— HarvardKennedySchool (@Kennedy_School) April 17, 2018
The rise of China and the election of President Donald Trump have led many to believe that the American century is effectively over. But the United States still has important power advantages https://t.co/m7rFXFqjU3
— HarvardKennedySchool (@Kennedy_School) April 16, 2018
#FletcherProf @rockfordw: "For decades, the DPRK’s naval forces saw little by way of modernization. In recent years, things have changed." https://t.co/76p2RVldxB cc: @FletchMaritime
— The Fletcher School (@FletcherSchool) April 17, 2018
#FletcherProf @MKleinEF joined @cgtnamerica to discuss U.S. – Japan trade relations in the 1980s, and how it compares to today's trade tensions with China: https://t.co/SrF93s2S4E
— The Fletcher School (@FletcherSchool) April 17, 2018
This port cost China $1 billion but goes largely unused. @iainmarlow explains why it's quite possibly the world's most controversial port https://t.co/E10kjjWzeF #tictocnews pic.twitter.com/8Xly7IcjrV
— TicToc by Bloomberg (@tictoc) April 18, 2018
China replaced the U.S. as the main export market for Vietnam last year https://t.co/jNqchqd4r5 pic.twitter.com/LjtxhfBkcd
— Bloomberg (@business) April 18, 2018
Trump says U.S. and North Korea have had direct talks at ‘very high levels’ https://t.co/Rrnf95U1Tc
— Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 17, 2018
South Korea could push for a more permanent peace agreement on the Korean Peninsula https://t.co/Ym0Tj8Ftib
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) April 18, 2018
Some 21% of foreign investment in U.S. real-estate debt as of mid-April came from South Koreahttps://t.co/CkRxz3yrT8
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) April 18, 2018
South Korea confirmed that it had been in talks with both American and North Korean officials about negotiating a peace treaty to formally end the Korean War after more than 60 years https://t.co/yNjmofG6tv
— The New York Times (@nytimes) April 18, 2018
Mike Pompeo's meeting with Kim Jong-un is the strongest indicator to date that plans for direct talks between Kim and President Trump are moving ahead https://t.co/R2dM84AQ9o
— The New York Times (@nytimes) April 18, 2018
Huawei, the technology giant long bedeviled by concerns about its ties to the Chinese government, has signaled that it believes its political battles in Washington are all but lost https://t.co/FI0t6XfKCU
— The New York Times (@nytimes) April 18, 2018
Kim Jong-un is planning to formally nod to denuclearization when he meets with South Korea’s leader, an official said https://t.co/cFusZb2ZTc
— The New York Times (@nytimes) April 17, 2018
CIA director Mike Pompeo's meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has made it harder for President Trump to back out of a summit https://t.co/NxFe2PGDl2
— CNN International (@cnni) April 18, 2018
South Korean film legend Choi Eun-hee, who was once abducted and forced to make movies for the North Korean regime, has died. She was 92. https://t.co/f8wkXa2e6W pic.twitter.com/8WmVGY1iGp
— CNN International (@cnni) April 17, 2018
CIA Director Mike Pompeo reportedly made a secret visit to North Korea to meet with the country's leader, Kim Jong Un, the weekend of March 31-April 1, @washingtonpost reported April 17. https://t.co/5JtcfsSANG
— Stratfor (@Stratfor) April 18, 2018
U.S.-#NorthKorea Summit: Trump, Kim and what’s different now. Our latest episode of the Stratfor #Podcast. https://t.co/zqK1f7nhiT
— Stratfor (@Stratfor) April 18, 2018
More: ZTE is one of the most important companies in #China's ongoing #tech innovation strategy, and the United States is engaged in an overall push against those efforts. https://t.co/ECLn5JvRdD pic.twitter.com/g6LbWbUQ8D
— Stratfor (@Stratfor) April 17, 2018
Context: ZTE has emerged as one of the five largest suppliers of telecommunications equipment in the world, but that status may be in jeopardy now, especially as it faces these challenges during the critical #5G testing, development and rollout period. https://t.co/esOPYJUqfY pic.twitter.com/Txz4OMTeHa
— Stratfor (@Stratfor) April 17, 2018
With the U.S.-#China economic spat in full gear, Washington is slapping a ban on a Chinese tech giant: ZTE. https://t.co/5msHi6C0jr
— Stratfor (@Stratfor) April 17, 2018
Here's what's actually different about the latest #NorthKorea talks.
– a new generation of North Korean leaders
– the unique political profile of U.S. President Donald Trump
– the advanced state of Pyongyang's nuclear program
An #OnGeopolitics column: https://t.co/WseV4U6YQo pic.twitter.com/3jvCWksbhZ— Stratfor (@Stratfor) April 17, 2018
President Trump said the U.S., #NorthKorea have begun speaking directly "at very high levels" ahead of talks w/ Kim Jong Un. In the latest episode of the Stratfor #Podcast, our analysts discuss what we should or should not expect: https://t.co/OF7EfK9sui
— Stratfor (@Stratfor) April 17, 2018
In response to recent U.S. trade measures, China's Commerce Ministry announced that U.S. companies exporting sorghum to China will be required to pay a 178.6 percent deposit on its value, @Reuters reported April 17. https://t.co/1hIS20RriP
— Stratfor (@Stratfor) April 17, 2018
Chinas Worst Fear: Can America Turn Taiwan into a Submarine Power? https://t.co/10UkEvOJ2B
— National Interest (@TheNatlInterest) April 18, 2018
How Chinas Military Really Sees America https://t.co/eOuJco0T4e
— National Interest (@TheNatlInterest) April 18, 2018
Superpower: China Claims This Is the Biggest Naval Parade in 600 Years https://t.co/8jHMFeQsTD
— National Interest (@TheNatlInterest) April 18, 2018
The US-led coordinated strikes on Syria last week, in response to the Assad regime’s suspected use of chemical weapons, has given the Chinese military more impetus to develop its own precision airborne strike systems. https://t.co/iDlNWyIkyJ
— National Interest (@TheNatlInterest) April 17, 2018
China and Russia are researching new weapons capable of crippling US satellite-based missile defenses, raising the stakes in a secretive new age arms race that will likely draw in several countries. https://t.co/wdk8KZLc5N
— National Interest (@TheNatlInterest) April 17, 2018
Addressing North Korea Requires a Joint U.S.-Chinese Effort https://t.co/BZAI6Kdsj5
— National Interest (@TheNatlInterest) April 17, 2018
China Is Moving into the Indian Ocean https://t.co/RUkP9GHSMv
— National Interest (@TheNatlInterest) April 17, 2018
Offer to Withdraw Americas Troops from South Korea to Seal a Nuclear Deal with the North https://t.co/FleP27V8jj
— National Interest (@TheNatlInterest) April 17, 2018
The decision would mark an abrupt about-face in the of a president who had campaigned against the trade deal https://t.co/SRHVllfogp
— AFP news agency (@AFP) April 12, 2018
No reward for North Korea without irreversible denuclearization: Pompeo https://t.co/I89zhno8Vh pic.twitter.com/lRXr97CzYj
— Reuters Top News (@Reuters) April 13, 2018
The key sticking point for a summit between President Trump and North Korea's leader: the definition of "denuclearization," @HudsonInstitute's @mikepillsbury tells @JudyWoodruff. pic.twitter.com/tdrcIwO9wJ
— PBS NewsHour (@NewsHour) March 28, 2018
#Podcast, with @nktpnd and @TheAsianist: Understanding How China Chooses to Coerce and Influence US Partners and Allies https://t.co/KwOCAIsU5i
— The Diplomat (@Diplomat_APAC) April 17, 2018
How Chinese People View the US-China Trade War https://t.co/SGrTmJQz58
— The Diplomat (@Diplomat_APAC) April 17, 2018
Park, Lee and the Plight of Korean Presidents https://t.co/z6RfW5yZQc
— The Diplomat (@Diplomat_APAC) April 16, 2018