Manuel Galileo

Manuel Galileo

Manuel Galileo is an associate tutor at the London School of Economics and Political Science, a research fellow at SOAS University of London, and a chartered civil engineer. He holds an MSc in international relations (research) from the LSE, and an MA in diplomacy from SOAS. He has worked on large-scale intergovernmental infrastructure projects including deep-water ports and oil refineries across three continents, and brings experience in Sino-European industrial collaboration and startup ecosystems. He has presented evidence at the House of Lords in Westminster and has contributed to arms control negotiations at the United Nations.
Manuel Galileo is an associate tutor at the London School of Economics and Political Science, a research fellow at SOAS University of London, and a chartered civil engineer. He holds an MSc in international relations (research) from the LSE, and an MA in diplomacy from SOAS. He has worked on large-scale intergovernmental infrastructure projects including deep-water ports and oil refineries across three continents, and brings experience in Sino-European industrial collaboration and startup ecosystems. He has presented evidence at the House of Lords in Westminster and has contributed to arms control negotiations at the United Nations.
Languages Spoken:
English

Opinion | China’s weaving of a web of ties makes it a diplomatic superpower

For China, cooperation doesn’t follow from pre-existing interests; it’s what shapes ties. And this relational web is increasingly visible.

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Washington, Beijing and Moscow must realise that rapid expansion of precision non-nuclear strike capabilities does not deter war, but instead invites miscalculation.

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Quiet revolutions in military affairs are taking place just as arms control is declining – and precisely when cooperation should increase.

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Related Topics
War and conflictDiplomacy