Fully-matching results
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US House Speaker Pelosi Arrives in Taiwan, Defying Beijing
Craig Kafura joins Chicago Tonight to discuss Speaker Pelosi's Taiwan trip and whether or not it complicates the relationship between the US and China.
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China Dismisses Olympic Boycott as "Farce"
"The 2021 Chicago Council Survey finds that a narrow majority of Americans support some sort of boycott of this year’s Beijing Olympics,” Craig Kafura tells WTTW.
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Is Xi Jinping Recalibrating China’s 'Wolf Warrior' Diplomacy?
Paul Heer discusses Xi Jinping's "wolf warrior diplomacy."
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Why US-China Cooperation Remains Elusive
"It is rarely acknowledged or even considered that Beijing actually shares much of Washington’s vision for the Indo-Pacific," argues Paul Heer in the National Interest.
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Why the ‘Longer Telegram’ Won’t Solve the China Challenge
Paul Heer discusses how recent recommendations on how to handle Beijing could be a recipe for trouble.
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What Washington Must do to Check China's Coercion
Western outreach to the Global South should not reject China, but rather focus on the rules of the liberal, capitalist system that the US and China thrive in.
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What Is Really Driving Chinese Aggression?
Actions by other players—including China’s neighbors and the United States—are key drivers of Beijing’s perception of the international environment and responses to it, Paul Heer explains.
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What Biden and Blinken Got Right on China
“If Washington is prepared to acknowledge that it can coexist with China, the strategic rivalry could be managed peacefully,” writes Paul Heer in the National Interest.
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Washington's Willful Blind Spot on China
The biggest obstacle to American understanding of China appears to be Washington’s seeming determination to misunderstand it, Paul Heer argues.
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War with China? Possible, but Not for Reasons You Think
"A China beginning to lose the underpinnings of its new-found international influence could prove even more dangerous," John Austin writes.
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US-China Rapprochement Will Not Come Quickly
“Both sides continue to pursue policies that appear aimed more at competition and confrontation,” writes Paul Heer in the National Interest.
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The Slow, Bumpy Road of US-China Diplomacy
"The only viable exit ramp is substantive diplomacy aimed at deescalation, mutual understanding, and incremental attention to each other’s core concerns," Paul Heer writes.
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New Book Hints at Biden’s Strategic Approach to China
Given the Biden administration’s mantra that the US-China relationship “will be competitive where it should be, collaborative where it can be, and adversarial where it must be,” Doshi’s discussion of the prospects for bilateral cooperation
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Mike Pompeo Challenges China's Governing Regime
The Secretary of State’s approach to Beijing risks confirming its suspicions about U.S. subversion while simultaneously alienating the very Chinese people that he aspires to "engage and empower."
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The Joe Biden-Xi Jinping Summit: Nothing Accomplished?
Despite Washington and Beijing’s apparent satisfaction with the meeting, the tensions at the heart of the relationship show no signs of abating, Paul Heer writes.
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Hostility between the United States and China Looks Increasingly Inescapable
Washington and Beijing see themselves locked in a zero-sum competition doubling as an existential ideological struggle, Paul Heer writes.
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Has Washington's Policy Toward Taiwan Crossed the Rubicon?
"If Taiwan […] is part of an international struggle against the PRC, how is that not a de facto ‘one China, one Taiwan’ policy?” writes Paul Heer in National Interest.
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Germany's Bet on China Is a Crisis in the Making
By tying itself to China, Germany risks making its mistakes with Russia all over again, argues Senior Nonresident Fellow John Austin.
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Engagement With China Has Not Failed
Paul Heer argues that US engagement with China has not failed - it just has not succeeded yet, and is still worth trying.