Trump and Nixon: A case of déjà vu?
By Greg Macabenta
On Feb. 21, 1972, President Richard Nixon made a historic trip to China, thus reestablishing ties with the Communist regime -- ties that had been broken since Mao Tse-tung and his forces took over the Chinese mainland in 1949.
Strategic initiatives from the private sector
By Katrina Clemente-Lua
The recent Shangri-La Dialogue which is an annual intergovernmental defense forum hosted by the International Institute for Strategic Studies was attended by 50 country delegates and ministers on the premise of building foundations for deeper security collaboration among the region’s policy makers.
Trump and Kim can learn a thing or two from Singapore
US PRESIDENT Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un are spending such a short amount of time in Singapore this week. Maybe they should stick around longer to see what makes its economy tick. Singapore is an especially wealthy nation, with a per capita income of about $90,000, well above that of the US. But how is this prosperity maintained, and why has Singapore commanded so much admiration from liberals and conservatives alike?
Breaking with allies, Trump shakes up world order
Washington's break with traditional G7 allies may open the way for a new world order in which Donald Trump cultivates former enemies and US-China...
Coordinating rhetoric and practices in the West Philippine Sea
By Alma Maria O. Salvador
The Philippines under the Duterte Administration should construct a narrative in order to make sense of its position in the West Philippine Sea (WPS).
Sustaining leadership excellence in the AFP
By Jaime S. de los Santos
On his deathbed, Alexander the Great’s comrades asked him, “To whom do you leave the kingdom?” To this, Alexander simply replied, “To the best and strongest.”
The DOM kiss
By Oscar P. Lagman
Many condemned President Rodrigo Duterte kissing an ordinary Filipina worker in Seoul as a power play -- the President taking advantage of his position to overwhelm the married woman to kiss him on the lips. Others say the issue is the crowd’s reaction to the “unpresidential” behavior -- the adoring Filipinos cheering vigorously their President flirting with women.
AirAsia doesn’t need a doctorate in the house
SAMSONITE International SA Chief Executive Officer Ramesh Tainwala resigned this month after a short seller highlighted issues with how he’d presented his educational history. Investors in AirAsia Bhd. should take notice.
The tragic consequences of suspending the oil excise tax
By Filomeno S. Sta. Ana III
Some quarters led by politicians (it doesn’t matter whether the politicians are pro-administration or anti-administration) have called for the suspension of the increase in the fuel excise tax brought about by the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN).
Mindanao power development, reality vs illusion
By Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr.
From 2006 to 2013, the Mindanao grid had only 1,900 to 2,000 MW of installed power capacity, mostly sourced from hydropower facilities that provide higher output during the rainy season but declines during the summer.
Strong leader as miracle worker: Deng Xiaoping drilled down
By Raul V. Fabella
It’s that time of year again and net gladiators are jousting on the red clay of the French Open (non-tennis buffs may skip this opener). One match in the round of sixteen kept me glued.
‘Kiss muna’ and the Altar of Secrets
By Amelia H. C. Ylagan
“Kiss muna,” he said, pointing to his puckered lips. “Give me a kiss first” and the many similar sexual innuendoes like it, are a most precise and succinct precondition that a lecherous man in a position of ascendancy and superior power and influence would lay on a woman depending on some outcome beneficial to her, through his beneficence.



