• China
    • Beijing
    • Shanghai
    • Guangzhou
    • Wuhan
    • Chengdu
    • Chongqing
    • Tianjin
    • Taiwan
    • Hong Kong
    • Macau
    • Belt and Road
    • Greater Bay Area
  • NE Asia
    • Japan
    • South Korea
    • North Korea
  • SE Asia
    • Brunei
    • Cambodia
    • Indonesia
    • Laos
    • Malaysia
    • Myanmar
    • Philippines
    • Singapore
    • Thailand
    • Timor Leste
    • Vietnam
  • South Asia
    • India
    • Pakistan
    • Bangladesh
    • Afghanistan
    • Nepal
    • Sri Lanka
    • Bhutan
    • Maldives
  • Middle East
    • Bahrain
    • Cyprus
    • Egypt
    • Iran
    • Iraq
    • Israel
    • Jordan
    • Kuwait
    • United Arab Emirates
    • Oman
    • Palestine
    • Qatar
    • Saudi Arabia
    • Syria
    • Turkey
    • Lebanon
    • Yemen
    • اللغة العربية
  • World
    • Australia
    • United States
    • Canada
    • Mexico
    • European Union
    • United Kingdom
    • France
    • Germany
    • New Zealand
    • Spain
    • Italy
    • Sweden
    • Brazil
    • Russia
  • Opinion
    • China
    • Business
    • Hong Kong
    • India
    • Donald Trump
    • Philippines
    • Southeast Asia
    • Politics
    • Asia Times News Video
  • Newsletters
  • Membership
    • Subscribe
    • Academic Rates
    • Payper News
    • My account
    • Lost password
    • FAQ
    • AT+ Commentary Archive
    • Asia Times store
    • AT+ Content Archive
  • ATimesCN
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
Skip to content

Asia Times

Covering geo-political news and current affairs across Asia

Tag: 2021 National Congress

Posted inAT Finance, Vietnam

Battle lines drawn for Vietnam’s future leadership

by David Hutt January 9, 2020February 18, 2020

Tran Quoc Vuong, a mainly unfamiliar apparatchik with Vietnam’s ruling Communist Party, arrived in France and the Czech Republic for rare state visits late last year. Vuong, head of the Party’s Inspection Commission and standing member of its Secretariat, seldom leaves Hanoi and certainly not for tours of European capitals. But with a quinquennial National […]

Posted inAT Finance, Vietnam

Hollow applause for Vietnam’s morality drive

by David Hutt November 21, 2019February 18, 2020

AT+ Premium stories

  • Hard strategic realities keep US and Japan apart
  • Can a US war with China be limited?
  • Ready or not, Chinese bonds are going global
  • China-Iran pact paves way for alternative to Suez
  • Still room to run on South Korea’s bull market
  • Biden $2.3 trillion boondoggle no challenge to China
  • Japan’s financial hub dream deflated by a rising China
  • Thailand’s outlaw brewers fight for their lives
  • Birth of a new geopolitical paradigm
  • China grits its teeth and bears the tightening pain

Top trending stories

  • US comes to Philippines' rescue in South China Sea
  • Obituary for America's war in Afghanistan
  • China splits Czech Republic down the political middle
  • Prophet Muhammad depiction rage explodes in Pakistan
  • China looms large over Biden-Suga meet
  • US cannot afford a world war with Russia
  • Can a US war with China be limited?
  • India should welcome US withdrawal from Afghanistan
  • Chip break from China will cost $1tn: report
  • More inflation than meets the eye in US retail jump

Military & Security

  • Generation kill: In praise of America’s F-35 fighter April 16, 2021
  • Sikorsky’s S-97 Raider impresses in first flight demos April 16, 2021
  • PC21: America goes to ‘virtual war’ with China April 14, 2021
  • Prince Philip’s British naval heroics recounted April 12, 2021
  • South Korea soars into elite group with KF-21 fighter April 10, 2021
  • China deploys fast-attack missile catamarans in SCS April 9, 2021
  • Can 3D-radar stop multiple killer drones? April 8, 2021
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with us
  • Write for us
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
© 2021 Asia Times. Proudly powered by Newspack by Automattic Privacy Policy
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS

This Site Uses Cookies

This site, like many others, uses small files called cookies to help us improve and customize your experience. Learn more about how we use cookies in our cookie policy.

Learn more about cookies