Vietnam's President To Lam's World Tour Signals Rising Middle Power Diplomacy
Auf einen Blick
Vietnam's President To Lam's extensive international itinerary, including stops in New Delhi, Helsinki, Paris, and London, is seen by analysts as a deliberate shift towards assertive middle-power diplomacy, moving beyond traditional quietude to actively shape engagement terms.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
Vietnam has historically practiced a quiet, reactive diplomacy, adapting to external pressures. President To Lam's recent international itinerary suggests a departure from this approach.
His itinerary, which also included stops in New Delhi, Helsinki, Paris, London and several Southeast Asian capitals, reads less like a diplomatic calendar than a world tour – and analysts say that is precisely the point.
“Where previous leaders practised a restrained, reactive diplomacy, To Lam is positioning Vietnam as a rising middle power with something to say and offer,” Dr Le Hong Hiep, a senior fellow at the Singapore-based ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute and coordinator of its Vietnam studies programme, told This Week in Asia.
“[It is] not merely a country navigating great power competition, but one shaping the terms of its engagement.”
For a nation that has long cultivated the art of strategic diplomatic quietude, bending under pressure and surviving through flexibility, it is a striking evolution.
Instead, analysts say he is reinforcing it with steel.
Offene Fragen
- What specific terms will Vietnam seek to shape in its engagements?
- How will other regional and global powers respond to Vietnam's assertive diplomacy?
- What domestic factors are driving this shift in foreign policy?





