The United States' strategic competition with China is intensifying, with calls for a shift in focus to weaken and ultimately defeat the Chinese Communist Party regime. Washington’s competition with Beijing should not be about managing threats but about weakening the regime. Experts argue that prioritizing Asia is just the first step, requiring national mobilization as time is running out. There is a growing debate on whether U.S. foreign policy should move away from American primacy to address issues important to developing countries and counter global disorder. Critics highlight that the U.S.'s focus on China has led to global issues like climate change being treated as secondary objectives.
In @nytopinion "The entire global order will be endangered if there is an empty vessel in the Oval Office, a headless superpower in a destabilizing world," our columnist Ross Douthat writes. https://t.co/vWKj4I7lJ4
#Opinion: The US prioritizing strategic competition with China has led to its commitments on global issues like climate change and cooperation with developing countries, including China, being viewed as secondary objectives or merely serving the "we win, they lose" strategic… https://t.co/QUIbHN223j
U.S. foreign policy has been bogged down by a focus on American primacy, argues @brhodes. To counter global disorder in years ahead, the United States must adopt a forward-thinking approach that prioritizes the issues developing countries care about most. https://t.co/PfghbEWEsT
“Prioritizing Asia is just the first step in managing competition between the United States and China. The next phase requires national mobilization. And the clock is ticking.” https://t.co/Vkpdo7mNzE
Against China, the United States Must Play to Win - Washington’s competition with Beijing should not be about managing threats—but weakening and ultimately defeating the Chinese Communist Party regime. https://t.co/6lwQGU2g7B