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I FORESEE TO WIN
NOTHING IS PERMANENT EXCEPT CHANGE

PS: (TẠM DỊCH ): CÓ THỂ ĐẢNG CH SẼ GIÚP OBAMA TĂNG CƯỜNG XOAY TRỤC QUA CHÂU Á.
(Foreign Policy) - Just days after the Nov. 4 U.S. midterm election transformed the American political landscape by handing control of Congress to Republicans, President Barack Obama will land in Asia for a series of summits with regional and world leaders. The timing is significant: Washington's new political constellation and the president's ability to move foreign friends and adversaries alike on key issues will define his last two years in office after recent rough patches at home and abroad. Here are five things Obama can do to turn weakness into strength over a week shuttling from the Nov. 10 Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Beijing and the subsequent East Asia Summit in Myanmar to the G-20 leaders' meeting in Australia on Nov.15 and 16. 

OTHER NEWS

The U.S.-China trade war that escalated Thursday with fresh tariffs on both sides is rooted in a battle for supremacy that encompasses national security as well as trade, leaving slim odds of an easy resolution. And no matter who wins, the conflict will sow the seeds of future trouble.  

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