International Herald Tribune
, 152, 154–5
International Monetary Fund (IMF), 309–18, 335, 386, 388, 422–3, 468
International Press Institute (IPI), 214–15, 217
Ishikawajima-Harima Industries (IHI) dockyard, 581
Ismail, Tun Dr, 259–60, 270
Israel, 30–1, 42–4, 75, 525
Jamaica, 407–8
Jamal Abdul Latiff, 257
Japan, 557–89
and Asean, 569–71, 576–7
and Kurile islands, 572
and the United States, 579, 700–1
Asia, investments in, 82–3
China, concern over a strong, 575–6
defence issues, 571
elitism, 579–80
energy conservation efforts, 581–2
Gulf War, contribution to, 573
Kobe earthquake, 588
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), 567, 570, 572–3, 576–7
ministry for international trade and industry (MITI), official stand on Japanese World War II actions,oil tanker accidents,productivity and management styles, Singapore, investment in, Social Democratic Party, Straits of Malacca issues, unions,universities, workers,Yasukuni shrine, Japan Productivity Centre,Japan-Singapore training centre, Jatikusomo, Jayakumar, S.,Jayewardene, Junius,Jek Yeun Thong,Jenkins, Roy, Jeyaretnam, J.B.,Jiang Qing, Jiang Zemin, Johnson, Lyndon Bird,Josey, Alex, Jurong industrial estate,Jurong Shipyards, Jurong Town Corporation,Kaifu, Toshiki, Kamanga, Reuben, Kapitsa, Mikhail S., Kaunda, Kenneth,Keating, Paul,Kennedy School of Government,Keppel Corporation,Khama, Seretse, Khan, Ghulam Ahmed,Kheng Chin Hock, Khieu Samphan, Khin May Than (Kitty), Khin Nyunt,Khmer Rouge,Khoo Teck Puat,Kidron, Mordecai,Kiet, Vo Van, Kim Dae Jung, Kim Il Sung,Kim Jong Il,Kim Jong Pil, Kim Young Sam, Kirk, Norman,
Kirkpatrick, Jeanne, 709
Kissinger, Henry, 483, 513–14, 517, 521–2, 645, 730
Koh Beng Seng, 93, 95, 100
Koh, Tommy, 374, 377, 534
Kohl, Helmut, 480, 483–7
Koo Chen-fu, 629
Korea: North-South relations, 599–600, 602
Korean War, 553, 579, 600, 666
Kosovo conflict, 545
Kosygin, A. Nikolayevich, 491–2, 498, 515
Kotelawala, John, 460
Kriangsak, 333–4, 373, 662, 668
Kukrit Pramoj, 303, 330–3, 640
Kumaratunga, Chandrika, 466
Kurile islands, 572
Kwa Geok Choo, 21, 25, 162, 169, 198, 250, 309, 359, 364, 407–9, 449, 455, 476, 485, 490–1, 493, 500,
507, 517–18, 548, 560–2, 603, 621, 644, 651, 654, 657, 683, 699, 747–9, 752–5
Kwik Kian Gie, 327
Lange, David, 446–8
Lee Chiaw Meng, 175
Lee Ek Tieng, 205–7
Lee Hsien Loong, 45, 100–1, 152, 197, 244, 280, 319, 427–8, 490, 745, 749–54
Lee Hsien Yang, 749, 754
Lee Khoon Choy, 293, 298–300, 370, 644, 657, 742
Lee Kuan Yew:
American investments in Singapore, promotes, 74–5
and Benazir Bhutto, 469–70
and Chiang Ching-kuo, 621–2, 679, 682
and Chris Patten, 609–10
and Deng Xiaoping, 660–9, 672–5, 677–9, 681–2, 714
and Do Muoi, 353–6, 359
and Eisaku Sato, 559–61
and François Mitterrand, 476–8
and George Bush, 530, 538–40
and Gerald Ford, 521–2
and Gough Whitlam, 439–40
and Gus Dur, 325–7
and Harold Wilson, 421
and Helmut Kohl, 483–7
and Helmut Schmidt, 482–3, 548
and Hua Guofeng, 642–50
and Hussein Onn, 271–4
and Indira Gandhi, 450–4
and Jacques Chirac, 479–80
and Jiang Zemin, 703–12
and Jimmy Carter, 523–5
and Junius Jayewardene, 463–4
and Kim Dae Jung, 596–7, 599–601
and Kosygin, 491–2
and Kukrit Pramoj, 331–3
and Lee Teng-hui, 625, 629–30
and Li Peng, 699–703
and Lyndon B. Johnson, 507–8, 514
and Mahathir Mohamad, 275–8, 281–2
and Mao Zedong, 644–5
and Marcos, 337–9
and Margaret Thatcher, 410–11, 424–6
and Narasimha Rao, 456–7
and Ne Win, 359–61, 363
and Nehru, 449–50
and Norman Kirk, 445
and Pham Van Dong, 348–50, 352–3
and Richard Nixon, 514–19
and Roh Tae Woo, 594–5
and Ronald Reagan, 526–30, 532–5
and Sihanouk, 365–6
and Sir Omar Ali Saifuddien, 343–6
and Suharto, 301–2, 305, 307–8
and Sukarno, 292–3
and Suzhou Industrial Park (SIP) project, 719–24
and Ted Heath, 421
and Thanom Kittikachorn, 329–30
and the Plen, 140–2
and Tony Blair, 427–8
and Tunku Abdul Rahman, 257–9, 265–7
and William Bundy, 504–6
and Willy Brandt, 481–2
and Yasuhiro Nakasone, 570–1
and Zhao Ziyang, 670–2, 675–7, 680–1
and Zia ul-Haq, 466–7
apologises for remarks on Johor Bahru, 283
at Beijing University, 653
attitude to Americans in the 1960s, 500–3, 554
birthday celebration in China, 680
“blood debt” issue with Japan, resolving the, 559
British honours, 414–15
British network, 416
cabinet colleagues, relationship with 226–7
constituency tours, 144
East Asia-European Union dialogue, proposes 481
election strategy, 148, 192
Freeman of City of London, 419–20
Harvard sabbatical, 1968, 73
Hong Kong business to Singapore, efforts to attract, 604–5, 607
honorary degree from University of Hong Kong, 604
InterAction Council member of former world leaders, 483
international advisory board member of J.P. Morgan, 98–9
libel actions, 151–5
Malay-language ability, 294
National Day telecasts, 148
Pakistan’s “Order of the Great Leader”, conferred, 467
Queen Elizabeth II’s silver jubilee, 408
resigns as prime minister, 735, 744, 753
siblings, 755
Soviets, note to cabinet on the, 482–3
union adviser, 103
US on China and Taiwan, advises the 514–17, 519–20, 527–34
US sabbatical, 511–14
Vietnam, economic advice to, 351–9
World Economic Forum, Davos, 320–1
Lee Kuan Yew on:
academics in Britain and the US, 512
acid test for schemes, 758–9
airports, 476, 481
allegations of election interference by the Tunku and Tan Siew Sin, 263–4
America’s Middle East solution, 540
Asean membership to Brunei, importance of, 344–5
Asian attitude towards gold, 473–4
“Asian miracle”, the, 389–90
Australia and New Zealand in the Asia Europe Meeting, including, 445
Australia’s protectionist policies, 431, 442
balancing individual competition and group solidarity, 128
British, French and Germans, the, 471
Cambodia, 1992–93, 410
campaigns, 199–211
central bank for Singapore, why no, 90, 262
Changi airport decision, 230–1
chief justice, choosing a, 245–9
China access to world markets, the danger of denying, 724–5
China Chinese dialects and accents, 656
China in 2050, his vision of 732
China’s economic progress, factors that may obstruct, 726–8
China’s provinces, 651–7, 683–90
China’s support of Malayan and Indonesian communist parties, 332
China-North Korean relations, 600
China-Taiwan relations, 631, 633–4
Chinese vs English education, 173–9
Chris Patten’s blueprint for Hong Kong, 610, 617–18
city-states, the survival record of, 762
common language establishing rapport, a, 487–8, 554, 621
Commonwealth cooperation, 400–1, 405
Confucian tradition, 126, 178–9, 353, 389, 542, 545, 599, 601, 680, 717
corruption, 182–3, 389, 391
defence arrangements for Singapore, 47–61, 429
Deng Xiaoping’s method of change vs Gorbachev’s, 496, 572, 694–5
detention without trial, 135
Devan Nair, 249–53
diminution of personal responsibility in the United States, the, 546
discipline vs democracy, 342
English-educated and Chinese-educated Singaporeans, the cultural gulf between, 546–7
Europe, building ties with, 471–2
European Community’s protectionist policies, the, 471–2
First World standards, establishing, 76–7, 199–201
foreign investors’ confidence in the Singapore government, 87–8
French leaders, 487
garden city, the 201–5
German and Japanese attitudes to their war records, 573–4
Goh Keng Swee, 227, 741, 743
good men for good government, 735–6
government savings to finance unprofitable industries, 391
Great Marriage Debate, the, 158–65
HDB architectural designs, 119
his children, 169, 177, 748–55
his colleagues in the early years, 757–8
his grandchildren, 751–2, 755
home ownership, 116–17
Hong Kong and Singapore, 603–6
Hong Kong people’s resilience, 605
how China’s government works, 690–1
how Japan should deal with anti-Japanese sentiments in Asia, 567
human rights and democracy issues, 542–56
India in the 1960s and 1970s, 451–2
information technology, 225, 244–5
Japan re-arming, the danger of, 574–5
Japanese and British shipyards, 581
Japanese, learning from the, 579–89
Japanese protocol, 560, 568
Japanese, the, 391, 557–8
Jimmy Carter’s book, 524–5
jury system, the 241
Koreans, the, 391, 590–2
Koreans and Taiwanese during World War II, 590
language obstacle to European cohesion, the, 487–8
leaders, selecting, 739–41
Malaysian Malaysia, a, 285–6
Malaysia-Singapore defence cooperation, 62–3
Malta dockyard after closure of Suez Canal, 69–70
Marcos and the Philippines, 535–6
media in Singapore, role of the, 217–18
media influencing people’s attitudes and behaviour, the, 717
ministerial pay, 193–6
Moscow, 489–90
multilingualism, 148
Myanmar, tourism for, 362
New Zealand, 444
no abiding natural source for US-China enmity, 515
“no begging bowl”, 70–1, 74
North-South Korea relations, 600
opposition walkabouts, 143, 145
Paris and London, 476
Russian card, playing the, 517
Russian courage, 493
Singapore banking practices, 98–9
Singapore real estate bubble, the 121
Singapore River project, the 205–7
Singapore savings, protecting the value of, 97
Singapore’s Third World status to gain concessions, preserving, 407
Soviets, the, 489–90, 492, 663
“Speak Mandarin” campaign, the, 179–80, 306
Sri Lanka, 1956, 460
Suharto’s choice of vice-president, 315
Taiwan and Hong Kong, economic progress in, 623
Thailand’s interests with China, pursues, 662, 668
Thais in Thailand’s foreign service, 329
Tokyo, 1962, 558–9
trade union practices, 103–5, 107
US intervention in Vietnam, 298, 302–3, 503–5, 509–10, 513, 516, 520–1, 553
US policy changes, the unpredictability of, 554–5, 590
US presence in Asia, support for, 331, 553, 595, 663
US rhetoric against China, the danger of, 541
Vietnam, 348, 399–400
war the result of no free trade, 480, 534–5, 563
White House ritual, 518–19
Lee Kuan Yew speaks at/to:
American Society of Newspaper Editors, 222–3
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