Daniel Michaeli
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Daniel Michaeli is a research associate in U.S. foreign policy at the Council on Foreign Relations, where his work focuses on China, India, and the future role of the United States in Asia. Before holding this position, he researched economic development issues in China on a Fulbright Research Fellowship.

Daniel lived in China for about a year and a half, spending time in 17 Chinese provinces or autonomous regions during several important moments in the recent Chinese experience: among them were the Tibet riots, the Sichuan earthquake, the Beijing Olympics, and the global financial crisis. His writing has been published by BusinessWeek, the Far Eastern Economic Review, the Huffington Post, and elsewhere. He graduated with honors in history from the University of Chicago and speaks, reads, and writes fluent Mandarin Chinese. He blogs at www.asiaruminations.com. Follow him on Twitter @danielmichaeli.

Blog Entries by Daniel Michaeli

Let's Negotiate an Investment Treaty with China

Posted April 8, 2011 | 15:39:33 (EST)

In recent years, Beijing has asked repeatedly for a treaty that would give U.S. investors in China greater and more enforceable rights. It is high time for the Obama administration to respond seriously -- by concluding its open-ended review of bilateral investment treaties and working one out with China. The...

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Obama in India: Testing a New World Order, Starting with the Security Council

Posted November 5, 2010 | 13:35:15 (EST)

November 8, 2010

The future of American global influence will be decided in Asia, and India's success could be a prerequisite for America's long-term position in the region. So President Obama just made a substantial step towards securing U.S. interests in Asia by endorsing India's aspiration to greater global and...

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Don't Let Iran Hijack the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue

Posted May 25, 2010 | 02:19:11 (EST)

By Daniel Michaeli and Joel Backaler

Monday's Strategic and Economic Dialogue between the United States and China provides the Obama administration with an opportunity to forge agreements in a number of areas of crucial significance for both U.S. economic competitiveness and strategic stability...

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