OF CEPA
India’s side
-One of the OECD countries
-To take the initiative in diplomatic negotiations with Japanand China
-To take the advantageous position first for the next FTA with EU andJapan
-To create economic superpower and expand economic influence in the world
South Korea’s side
-The second most populous country
-One of the BRICs country
-Economy based on foreign investmen
of doi moi in a country whose foreign relations awe too dissimilar from that of post-1986 Vietnam. For example, Vietnamese and North Korean foreign policies have had little in common in the last two decades, and this difference may have been interrelated with the dramatic contrast between Vietnam's economic boom and North Korea's recurrent setbacks. This subject is certainly worth investigating,
and put off approving the new U.S. ambassador to China and canceled the scheduled visits to Washington by Defense Minister Chi Haotian and State Counselor Li Guixian. As a warning toward Taipei, Beijing suspended the second round of Wang-Koo talks, semi-official talks between China and Taiwan which discussed reconciliatory measures in cross-Strait relations, which was scheduled to take place in J
of the East European Communist diplomats who were accredited to Hanoi in the 1980s. Namely, the Hungarian diplomats whose reports I read managed to collect an impressive amount of confidential information about economic matters, state- society relations, anddiplomatic negotiations, because many VCP cadres, having conversations with the "fraternal" diplomats, skpe about the country's internal pro
Ⅰ. Introduction
1. Purpose of Research
The following are the main purposes of this research: analyzing the event of North Korea Collapse and the following scenarios which were assumed by scholars, suggesting different diplomatic strategy andrelations of foreign countries and counter-plan of government of South Korea, and finding the role of U.N. in the event of North Korea Collapse and i