Paul Haenle
Paul Thomas Haenle is an American political adviser, and an international relations professor and consultant.
Career
Paul Haenle holds the Maurice R. Greenberg Director’s Chair at the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center for Global Policy in Beijing, China. He established CTC, the Beijing-based think tank of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, at Tsinghua University in 2010. In 2018, CTC was named the “Best International Global Affairs Think Tank” by Prospect Magazine.In addition to his role at Carnegie, Haenle is also Chairman, Asia Pacific Region, at the CEO advisory firm Teneo and a senior advisor at Rice, Hadley, Gates & Manuel LLC, where he assists U.S. and foreign businesses with their cross-border business strategy, including the development of key government relationships, crisis management, and public relations. Haenle also serves as senior advisor to SAGE Worldwide, a global events and speaker company; the Royal Asiatic Society, Beijing Chapter; and the Young China Watchers, a global platform for facilitating dialogue between international and Chinese young professionals. He is also an adjunct professor at Tsinghua University, where he teaches undergraduate and graduate-level courses on international relations and global governance. In 2018, Haenle was elected to the board of directors of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations.
Prior to joining Carnegie, Haenle served as the White House China director on the National Security Council under former Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. He was also the White House representative to the U.S. negotiating team at the Six-Party Talks from June 2007 to January 2009. During his distinguished government service, Haenle served as special assistant to U.S. National Security Advisors Condoleezza Rice and Stephen Hadley from 2004 to 2007, and in the Pentagon as a China advisor for the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Haenle is an expert on U.S.-China relations, China’s foreign and defense policy, and North Korea. He hosts CTC's biweekly "China in the World" podcast, which features a series of conversations with Chinese and international experts on China’s foreign policy, China’s international role, and China’s relations with the world. Since the first episode in 2013, the podcast has been downloaded over a million times from over 125 countries. Haenle also writes for and is frequently quoted by major global media outlets including Foreign Affairs, The New York Times, Washington Post, CNN, The Guardian, and the Financial Times. He is also a frequent contributor to the Asia Society’s ChinaFile.
Trained as a China foreign area officer in the U.S. Army, Haenle was twice assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. He served as a U.S. Army company commander during a two-year tour to the Republic of Korea. Early assignments in the U.S. Army included postings in Germany, Desert Storm, Korea, and Kuwait. He retired from active duty as a lieutenant colonel in October 2009.
Haenle received an M.A in Asian studies from Harvard University, and a B.S. from Clarkson University.
Published works
- "China isn't riding to rescue the Australian economy"
- "Can the United States and China Cooperate on the Coronavirus?"
- "The United States and China See Things Differently. Can They Reach an Understanding?"
- "Hong Kong: Continued Unrest with No Clear Path to a Resolution"
- "U.S.-China Trade War, Light at the End of the Tunnel?"
- "Chaos in Hong Kong: Protests and Unrest Persist"
- "Trump Is Beijing’s Best Asset"
- "How Has the U.S.-China Relationship Changed Over Seventy Years?"
- "What Exactly Is the Story with China’s Rare Earths?"
- "How Are Various Countries Responding to China’s Belt and Road Initiative?"
- "Is This the End of Belt and Road, or Just the Beginning?"
- "The Belt and Road Initiative: Views from Washington, Moscow, and Beijing"
- "What Will Happen at the Second Trump-Kim Nuclear Summit?"
- "Global Trade Outlook"
- "A Tale of Two Cities: Singapore and Hanoi"
- "U.S.-China Relations at the Forty-Year Mark"
- "Tempering Expectations Ahead of the G20"
- "China’s Deleveraging Overshadows Trade War"
- "On Secretary of State Pompeo’s Upcoming North Korea Visit" . Translated version here.
- "Foreign Policy Experts on the Singapore Summit and What Comes Next"
- "Mapping Regional Agendas for the Singapore Summit"
- "More than a Belt, More than a Road"
- "Does China Want the Koreas to Reconcile?"
- "China Seizes the Initiative in Complicated North Korea Diplomacy"
- "China: Trade Tensions, Talks with North Korea and Term Limits"
- "China’s Future Under Xi Jinping"
- "Trump’s Wake-Up Call on China"
- "What Will a Powerful Xi Mean For the China-U.S. Relationship?"
- "China and the World After the 19th Party Congress"
- "New Reformists Emerging in China"
- "Bannon Says the U.S. Is at ‘Economic War with China’"
- "U.S. and Chinese Scholars Take on the U.S.-China Economic Dialogue"
- "Trump and Xi at G20 in Hamburg: Time to Abandon Illusions"
- "The World Is Deserting Taiwan. How Should the U.S. Respond?"
- "Shanghai Cooperation Organization at Crossroads: Views From Moscow, Beijing and New Delhi"
- "Xi’s Vision for China’s Belt and Road Initiative"
- "The Mirage of the Deal: Trump’s Grand Bargains with Russia and China"
- "Don’t Call it the New Chinese Global Order " .
- "Is the Trump Era Really the Xi Era?"
- "How Trump’s Call With Taiwan Could Affect U.S. Goals in Asia"
- "The Next U.S. President and Beyond"
- "How Should Trump Deal With China, and How Should China Deal With Trump?"
- "Will Trump Strike a Grand Bargain With China?"
- "The Real Answer to China’s THAAD Dilemma"
- "Young Ambassadors Program Builds Sino-U.S. Trust for New Generation"
- "New Realities in the U.S.-China Relationship"
- "Mounting Difficulties For Doing Business in Xi Jinping’s China"
- "The Catch-22 in U.S.-Chinese Relations"
- "A Reference Point for Internationalizing Chinese Think Tanks" Translated version here.
- "The World in 2015"
- "China Flexes Diplomatic Muscles to Match Growing Economic Size"
- "Building Strategic Trust in the U.S.-China Relationship"
- "North Korea’s Charm Offensive: New Cards, Same Player"
- "Moving Beyond China’s Confident Rhetoric on Syria"
- "U.S.-China Relations: Moving Beyond the Script" .
- "Baucus Can Bring China to Congress"
- "What Does a New Type of Great-Power Relations Mean for the United States and China?"
- "Charm Offensive At Sea"
- "Time to Reopen Talks With North Korea?"
- "China Misses a Golden Opportunity in Syria" Translated version here.
- "Xi and Abe Need to Talk"
- "North Korea is China’s Problem Now"
- "Moving Beyond the Script at the U.S.-China Summit"
- "The Middle East at the U.S.-China Summit"
- "North Korea’s Defiance May Reshape China’s Strategic Calculus"
- "Sino-U.S. Ties Need New Approach"
- "A New Great-Power Relationship With Beijing"
- "The China Factor in the U.S. Presidential Election: Separating Rhetoric from Action"
- "Xi's Visit Lays Foundations of Future Cooperation"
- "Overcoming Mistrust in U.S.-China Relations" .