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China

Condemning the Chinese Communist Party Is Not Enough

In the News
The National Interest
Paul Heer

Condemning the CCP regime "will have limited utility and success in either liberalizing China or yielding other strategic benefits for the United States."

Visitors stop at an exhibit on the Chinese Communist Party at the National Museum in Beijing.
Reuters
Global Politics

A CAATSA Waiver for India: What's Really at Stake

In the News
The Diplomat
Chet Lee

If the U.S. wants to counter China’s military expansion, it cannot afford to jeopardize security ties with India.

The Scorpene submarine Vagsheer in Mumbai, India.
Reuters
Defense and Security

Engagement With China Has Not Failed

In the News
The National Interest
Paul Heer

Paul Heer argues that US engagement with China has not failed - it just has not succeeded yet, and is still worth trying.

Chinese President Xi Jinping in Paris.
Reuters
US Foreign Policy

World Review: Boris Johnson's Resignation, Xi Declares Victory in Hong Kong, Biden Shifts to Middle East

Video Series
World Review with Ivo Daalder

Karen DeYoung, Bobby Ghosh, and Nahal Toosi join Ivo Daalder to discuss the week's top news stories.

Boris Johnson giving a speech
Reuters
Global Politics

Will US-China Competition Unseat US Lead in Higher Education?

Podcast
Deep Dish on Global Affairs Podcast

Brian Hanson, Karin Fischer, and William Kirby discuss how America’s universities fare in an age of increased global competition and fragmentation.

A group of people in red graduation caps and gowns
REUTERS
Culture

Last Best Hope: The West's Final Chance to Build a Better World Order

In the News
Foreign Affairs
Ivo H. Daalder

Ivo Daalder and James Lindsay argue that the West must form a G-12 alliance to “turn its newfound unity into a broader effort to save the rules-based order.”

G7 Meeting in Brussels in front of flags and a brick wall.
Reuters
Defense and Security

Why US-China Cooperation Remains Elusive

In the News
The National Interest
Paul Heer

"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.

Reuters
Defense and Security

Biden's Taiwan "Gaffe" Just Said the Quiet Part out Loud

In the News
World Politics Review
Paul Poast

Paul Poast argues that President Biden's declaration that the US would defend Taiwan if it were attacked by China deserves a serious look.

U.S. President Joe Biden speaks at the Quad leaders’ summit, in Tokyo, Japan, May 24, 2022.
Reuters
Global Politics

World Review: Biden's Summit of the Americas, China's Goals in the South Pacific, Updates on Ukraine

Video Series
World Review with Ivo Daalder

Jamil Anderlini, Carla Anne Robbins, and Peter Spiegel join Ivo Daalder to discuss the week's top news stories.

Honduran President Xiomara Castro and U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris meet for a bilateral meeting at the presidential palace in Tegucigalpa
Reuters
US Foreign Policy

What Biden and Blinken Got Right on China

In the News
The National Interest
Paul Heer

“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.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Rome
Reuters
Defense and Security