No substitute for victory: America’s competition with China must be won, not managed
By: Pottinger, Matt and Gallagher, Mike
.
Material type:
BookPublisher: Foreign Affairs Description: 103(3), May-Jun, 2024: p.25-39.
In:
Foreign AffairsSummary: Amid a presidency beset by failures of deterrence—in Afghanistan, Ukraine, and the Middle East—the Biden administration’s China policy has stood out as a relative bright spot. The administration has strengthened U.S. alliances in Asia, restricted Chinese access to critical U.S. technologies, and endorsed the bipartisan mood for competition. Yet the administration is squandering these early gains by falling into a familiar trap: prioritizing a short-term thaw with China’s leaders at the expense of a long-term victory over their malevolent strategy. The Biden team’s policy of “managing competition” with Beijing risks emphasizing processes over. Reproduced
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/no-substitute-victory-pottinger-gallagher
| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Articles
|
Indian Institute of Public Administration | 103(3), May-Jun, 2024: p.25-39 | Available | AR132262 |
Amid a presidency beset by failures of deterrence—in Afghanistan, Ukraine, and the Middle East—the Biden administration’s China policy has stood out as a relative bright spot. The administration has strengthened U.S. alliances in Asia, restricted Chinese access to critical U.S. technologies, and endorsed the bipartisan mood for competition. Yet the administration is squandering these early gains by falling into a familiar trap: prioritizing a short-term thaw with China’s leaders at the expense of a long-term victory over their malevolent strategy. The Biden team’s policy of “managing competition” with Beijing risks emphasizing processes over. Reproduced
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/no-substitute-victory-pottinger-gallagher


Articles
There are no comments for this item.