Brian Wong is a Rhodes Scholar from Hong Kong (2020) and DPhil in Politics Candidate at Balliol College, Oxford.
They are the Founding Editor-in-Chief of the Oxford Political Review; Founding Secretary of Citizen Action Design Lab, Founding Fellow of Governance Partners Yangon, and write regularly for The Diplomat Magazine, TIME, the South China Morning Post, and other academic and media publications. They can be followed on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
https://thediplomat.com/authors/brian-wong/
Wong appears to be a brilliant student, however, his writing in the article underlying this thread raises serious doubt over his objectivity in any China-U.S. analysis.
Here is a further sample of his writing a few days after our recent presidential election:
Biden’s victory promises a return to normalcy in Washington...
...it remains unclear if Trump will exit the White House in January. It is also possible that the 45th president decides to escalate tensions with China over the next two months, as a means of diverting the public’s attention from his electoral defeat and the outright illegality of his refusal to concede. It remains unclear whom Biden’s staffers and appointees would be, and how closely affiliated they will be with the hawkish anti-China establishment.
https://thediplomat.com/2020/11/what-should-chinas-biden-policy-look-like/
The last sentence above gives us a hint of the level of Wong's objectivity; nor does he anywhere in the article point out the overwhelming number of communist-CCP-Socialist supporters known to be on Biden's appointment list, or in his campaign starting with its manager, Anita Dunn.