Rating: Not rated
Tags: Biography, Lang:en
Added: November 19, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
Born in 1923, Singapore's former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew
has spent a lifetime being intimately involved in international
affairs. He has met every major Chinese leader from Mao Zedong
to Xi Jinping and hobnobbed with American presidents from
Lyndon Johnson to Barack Obama. In this book, Lee draws on that
wealth of experience and depth of insight to offer his views on
today's world and what it might look like in 20 years. This is
no dry geopolitical treatise. Nor is it a thematic account of
the twists and turns in global affairs. Instead, in this
broad-sweep narrative that takes in America, China, Asia and
Europe, he parses their society, probes the psyche of the
people and draws his conclusions about their chances for
survival and just where they might land in the hierarchy of
tomorrow's balance of power. What makes a society tick? What do
its people really believe? Can it adapt? In spare, unflinching
prose that eschews political correctness, he describes a China
that remains obsessed with control from the centre on its way
to an unstoppable rise; an America that will have to share its
pre-eminence despite its never-say-die dynamism; and a Europe
that struggles with the challenges of keeping its union intact.
His candid and often startling views - on why Japan is closed
to foreigners, why the Arab Spring won't bring one man, one
vote to the Middle East, and why preventing global warming is
not going to be as fruitful as preparing for it - make this a
fresh and gripping read. Lee completes the book by looking into
the future of Singapore - his enduring concern - and by
offering the reader a glimpse into his personal life and his
view of death. The book is interspersed with a Q&A section
in each chapter, gleaned from conversations he had with
journalists from The Straits Times. **