Fully-matching results
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Americans Sense China Eclipsing US Economically, Poll Finds
As competition between the United States and China intensifies, more Americans now say the Asian country is more powerful economically, a reversal from two years ago when a plurality said the United States had an economic advantage, according to a
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What Americans Think about China and Taiwan
Dina Smeltz and Craig Kafura argue that a majority of Americans support backing Taiwan as the U.S. has backed Ukraine, as long as U.S. troops aren’t involved.
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Why the new China consensus in Washington scares me
Meet the new Red Scare. Is it the same as the old Red Scare?
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China Says It Will Not Arm Russia against Ukraine
Macron’s statements show Europe’s concern that US attention will waver too much from Ukraine to Taiwan, argues Sibel Oktay.
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Blinken Stresses "True Partnership" on Tour of Africa
"There's a little bit of FOMO if we aren't going to be there, that we're afraid of missing out on places that Russia and China are really prioritizing."
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Blinken Says He Warned China about Military, Intel Activities in Cuba
China's actions in Cuba reflect its increased parity with the United States on the world stage, argues Nonresident Senior Fellow Paul Heer.
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Biden Cites US Resolve in Facing Aggression from Russia and China
Senior Fellow Elizabeth Shackelford remarks on the foreign policy details of President Biden's 2023 State of the Union address.
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A Foreign Policy for the Middle Class?
What does the American public think about China, internal v. external threats, and who benefits from US foreign policy? Craig Kafura joins the Un-Diplomatic Podcast to discuss.
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Paul Heer on the Danger of Overstating China's Ambitions
"We have to deal with China and the way to deal with it is to engage with it," argues Nonresident Senior Fellow Paul Heer in the Wire China.
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Canada's Place in the Great Resource GameÂ
"Notwithstanding China’s firm grip on global supply chains of critical minerals and rare earths, Canada can support a more predictable green transition."
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City Leaders Go Abroad: A Survey of City Diplomacy in 47 Cities
Cities recognize the importance of city diplomacy but also lack necessary resources to fulfill the commitments they make to global agendas, Council fellows Kris Hartley and Michele Acuto explain.
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Support for Taiwan Among US Public Increases: Poll
New polls find that 52 percent of Americans now favor sending US troops to defend Taiwan if China invades. Craig Kafura talks to Taiwan Plus about what this means.
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Evaluating the US Response to China's Balloon
"Chinese satellites fly over the United States every day," Nonresident Senior Fellow Bruce Jentleson tells Steve Scully. "That doesn't make a headline the way a balloon does."
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How China's Balloon Impacts the Guardrails on Its US Relationship
There was no way for Blinken’s Beijing trip to go on as planned and not focus inordinately on the balloon incident, argues Paul Heer.
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The Geopolitics of Biden's G7 Trip
As world leaders meet in Japan, they are likely to discuss Russia's war in Ukraine, tensions in the Taiwan Strait, and economic coercion from China, Craig Kafura tells Steve Scully.
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More Americans Concerned China's Rise Is Threat to US Than Any Time since 1990: Survey
"It will take years of continued improvements to rebuild American confidence and trust in China," Craig Kafura says.
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What the Coronavirus Vaccine Roll-Out Says about Innovation in an Age of Geopolitical Rivalry
Kris Hartley and Asit K. Biswas discuss intellectual property protection and diplomacy through vaccine provision.
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South Korea's Success in Containing the Coronavirus Highlights Importance of Digital Resilience
One of the emerging lessons of the Covid-19 pandemic is that countries and companies that digitised early are more likely to recover faster than those that did not
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Poll: Proportion of Americans Worried about China's Rise Hits Post-Cold War High
The US public's perception of China has changed significantly since Xi Jinping took office, Craig Kafura says.
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How the American Public Views China
An important debate has cracked open about the future of the U.S.-China relationship. This was inevitable. But the debate, while increasingly contentious, has been limited to politicians, policymakers, and pundits, largely overlooking what most