By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
In October, at the
20th National Party Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), General Secretary Xi Jinping set himself up for another
decade as China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong replaced his most
economically literate Politburo colleagues with a phalanx of loyalists, and
enshrined the Stalinist-Maoist concept of “struggle” as a guiding principle in
the Party Charter. The effect was to turn the page on “reform and opening,” the
term the CCP uses to describe the economic liberalization that began in the
late 1970s and led to the explosive growth of the Chinese economy in the past
four decades.
At the party congress,
Xi was granted a third term as the CCP’s top leader—an unprecedented
development in the contemporary era and a crucial step in his effort to
centralize authority. But perhaps even more significant was the way the
congress served to codify a worldview that Xi has been developing over the past
decade in carefully crafted official party communications: Chinese-language
speeches, documentaries, and textbooks, many of which Beijing deliberately
mistranslates for foreign audiences when it translates them at all. These texts
dispel much of the ambiguity that camouflages the regime’s aims and methods and
offer a window into Xi’s ideology and motivations: a deep fear of subversion,
hostility toward the United States, sympathy with Russia, a desire to unify mainland
China and Taiwan, and, above all, confidence in the ultimate victory of
communism over the capitalist West. The end state he is pursuing requires the
remaking of global governance. His explicit objective is to replace the modern
nation-state system with a new order featuring Beijing at its pinnacle.
Granted, Beijing’s
aspirations, like Moscow’s, may be greater than what it can realistically
accomplish. But Xi, like the man he has described as his “best, most intimate
friend,” Russian President Vladimir Putin, does not seem to believe that his
reach exceeds his grasp. Policymakers around the world
should take note.
In October, at the
20th National Party Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), General
Secretary Xi Jinping set himself up for another decade as China’s most powerful
leader since Mao Zedong replaced his most economically literate Politburo
colleagues with a phalanx of loyalists, and enshrined the Stalinist-Maoist concept
of “struggle” as a guiding principle in the Party Charter. The effect was to
turn the page on “reform and opening,” the term the CCP uses to describe the
economic liberalization that began in the late 1970s and led to the explosive
growth of the Chinese economy in the past four decades.
At the party
congress, Xi was granted a third term as the CCP’s top leader—an unprecedented
development in the contemporary era and a crucial step in his effort to
centralize authority. But perhaps even more significant was the way the
congress served to codify a worldview that Xi has been developing over the past
decade in carefully crafted official party communications: Chinese-language
speeches, documentaries, and textbooks, many of which Beijing deliberately
mistranslates for foreign audiences when it translates them at all. These texts
dispel much of the ambiguity that camouflages the regime’s aims and methods and
offer a window into Xi’s ideology and motivations: a deep fear of subversion,
hostility toward the United States, sympathy with Russia, a desire to unify
mainland China and Taiwan, and, above all, confidence in the ultimate victory
of communism over the capitalist West. The end state he is pursuing requires
the remaking of global governance. His explicit objective is to replace the
modern nation-state system with a new order featuring Beijing at its pinnacle.
Granted, Beijing’s
aspirations, like Moscow’s, may be greater than what it can realistically
accomplish. But Xi, like the man he has described as his “best, most intimate
friend,” Russian President Vladimir Putin, does not seem to believe that his
reach exceeds his grasp. Policymakers around the world should take note.
It would be better to
constrain and temper Xi’s aspirations now—through coordinated military
deterrence and strict limits on China’s access to technology, capital, and data
controlled by the United States and its allies—rather than wait until he has
taken fateful and irrevocable steps, such as attacking Taiwan, that would lead
to a superpower conflict. The war in Ukraine offers constant reminders that
deterrence is far preferable to “rollback.”
The Biden
administration’s recent steps to constrain Xi’s quest to make China the world’s
dominant semiconductor manufacturer—a status that Beijing has already achieved
in telecommunications equipment, solar panels, advanced batteries, and other
vital sectors—mark a significant evolution in U.S. strategy. If Congress, the
White House, and U.S. allies quickly enact similar measures that sustain
Chinese dependence on the rest of the industrialized world, it could blunt Xi’s
growing appetite for risk.
There is also a moral
imperative for concerted action, highlighted by the street protests that have
erupted in several Chinese cities recently as people have grown exasperated
with draconian anti-COVID measures bearing Xi’s signature. Xi’s response could
be severe if the demonstrations gain momentum, judging from some of his more
ominous statements. In any case, democracies should do more to side with the
Chinese people by facilitating safer means to communicate with one another both
inside and outside China.
Mouthfuls Of Sawdust
Reading CCP documents
can be a brutal exercise. The late Simon Leys, one of the most insightful China
watchers in the West, compared it to “swallowing sawdust by the bucketful.”
Wading through the texts of “Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese
Characteristics for a New Era,” as the leader’s ideology is officially known,
is no exception. Much of Beijing’s rhetoric, mainly directed at foreign
audiences, is confusing and ambiguous. But Xi’s most revealing statements are
not the ones he makes at Davos or while standing next to the U.S. president in
the Rose Garden. Instead, he is most trenchant when delivering speeches to top
CCP leaders. Such lessons, which guide the party faithful, are sometimes kept
secret for months or years before appearing in Chinese-language publications.
But as Leys understood, they contain slivers of insight if one is patient and
diligent enough to search for them.
Xi’s texts reflect
his inheritance as the latest in a long line of communist theorists and leaders
steeped in similar doctrines, traditions, and desired end states. Marx, Lenin,
Stalin, and Mao can all be seen in Xi Jinping Thoughts, letters, and spirit.
And Xi does not represent as radical a departure from his more immediate
predecessors as some analysts believe; his ambitions and those of the party
that elevated him are broadly in sync.
However, none of this
is to say that CCP bosses are interchangeable. Leadership matters in Leninist
systems as much as in any other method. And Xi’s imprint is all over Beijing’s
current approach, even if his desired end states are consistent with those of
his predecessors. Chinese critics mock him as “The Great Accelerator,” alleging
that he is speeding the eventual demise of the party’s monopoly on power. His
champions would probably agree that he is an accelerator—but in their eyes, he
is speeding up the process of achieving the party’s long-standing goals. Either
way, there is no denying that Xi is the most important person to watch and read
if one is to understand where China is headed and why.
One key to
understanding Xi is to look at his interpretations of history. It is well known
that Putin once declared the Soviet Union’s collapse to be the greatest
geopolitical catastrophe of the twentieth century. Less well understood is the
extent to which the Soviet collapse also haunts Xi and how it functions as a
fundamental guide to the Chinese leader’s actions.
In December 2012,
just after becoming general secretary, Xi gave a closed-door speech to cadres
in Guangdong Province, excerpts of which were leaked and published by a Chinese
journalist in early 2013. Xi’s speech, framed as a cautionary tale, provided an
early window into his worldview:
Why did the Soviet
Union disintegrate? Why did the Soviet Communist Party collapse? An important
reason was that their ideals and beliefs had been shaken. . . . It’s a profound
lesson for us! To dismiss the history of the Soviet Union and the Soviet
Communist Party, to dismiss Lenin and Stalin, and to dismiss everything else is
to engage in historic nihilism, and it confuses our thoughts and undermines the
Party’s organizations on all levels.
Xi’s mention of
“historical nihilism” may have been an implicit criticism of the Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev, who had faulted the record of his predecessors. But the
explicit villain in Xi’s speech was Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet leader whose
perestroika (restructuring) and glasnost (opening) reforms set the stage for
the dissolution of the Soviet Union. “A few people tried to save the Soviet
Union,” Xi said. “They seized Gorbachev, but it was turned around again within
days because they didn’t have the tools of dictatorship. Nobody was brave
enough to stand up and resist.” The phrase “the tools of dictatorship”—the idea
that the party and especially its top leader needs to control the military, the
security apparatus, propaganda, government data, ideology, and the
economy—would recur again and again in Xi’s speeches and official guidance over
the next decade.
A door with a poster about the 20th National Congress
in Beijing, October 2022
In January 2013, Xi
gave another speech, effectively an inaugural address, to new members and
alternate members of the CCP’s Central Committee, composed of China’s top few
hundred highest-ranking officials. This speech, kept secret for six years,
shows Xi directing the party-state in terms borrowed right from the Cold
War:
Some people think
that communism can be aspired to but never reached, or even think that it
cannot be hoped for, cannot be envisioned, and is a complete illusion. . . .
Facts have repeatedly told us that Marx and Engels’s analysis of the basic
contradiction of capitalist society is not outdated, nor is the historical
materialist view that capitalism will inevitably perish and socialism will
inevitably triumph outdated. This is the irreversible overall trend of social
and historical development, but the road is winding. The ultimate demise of
capitalism, and ultimate triumph of socialism, will inevitably be a long
historical process.
Three months after
that, in April 2013, the Central Committee issued Document No. 9, an internal
directive to party cadres that has proved to be a foundational text of the Xi
era—systematic and strategic in its vision, hugely influential on the course of
Chinese governance, and deeply hostile toward the West and Western ideas. It
was kept secret until it was leaked to overseas Chinese-language media in the
summer of 2013. Document No. 9 was formally titled “Communiqué on the Current
State of the Ideological Sphere.” It told an unambiguous story: Western
countries conspire to infiltrate, subvert, and overthrow the CCP, so the party
must stamp out Western “false ideological trends,” including constitutional
democracy, the notion that Western values are universal, the concept of civil
society, economic neoliberalism, journalistic independence, challenges to the
party’s version of history, and competing interpretations of the party’s
“reform and opening” agenda. “In the face of these threats,” exhorted Document No.
9, “we must not let down our guard or decrease our vigilance.”
Document No. 9 also
warned of a “color revolution.” This term originated in the first decade of
this century when a series of antiauthoritarian popular uprisings in former
Soviet states became known by colorful names, including Georgia’s Rose
Revolution (2003), Ukraine’s Orange Revolution (2004), and Kyrgyzstan’s Tulip
Revolution (2005). Beijing began using the phrase to evoke the ever-present
specter of Western-instigated subversion. As Document No. 9 put it, “Western
anti-China forces” will always “point the spearhead of Westernization,
division, and ‘color revolution’ at our country.”
In late 2013, Xi
required party leaders at all levels to watch a six-part documentary titled “A
20-Year Memorial for the Soviet Loss of Party and Country.” This “internal
educational reference film” attributed the Soviet collapse to deep problems
within the Soviet Communist Party, including its inability to manage political
and economic infiltration and corruption that it blamed on the United States.
The film was jointly produced by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and the
Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the party’s internal loyalty
enforcer.
The same year,
Beijing’s National Defense University produced an independent
documentary, Silent Contest, distributed by several parties and
state organs. The film similarly used the Soviet collapse to rail against the
“world strategy” of the United States. This was the opening line of Silent
Contest: “The process of China’s realization of the great undertaking of
national rejuvenation must ultimately follow from testing and struggle against
the system of American hegemony.” Later, the film shows a clip of Putin
delivering his now-famous remark that the Soviet collapse was a geopolitical
catastrophe.
When Water Becomes Ice
Xi’s decision-making
can be understood only concerning Marxist-Leninist theory. In Marxist
dialectics, history moves inexorably toward its romantic destination “step by
step,” accumulating “quantitative increases that culminate in a qualitative
leap,” as Xi explained, paraphrasing Mao, in a speech delivered to high-ranking
cadres in January 2021 and published in April 2021.
Mao, in turn, was
paraphrasing Joseph Stalin’s rendering of Friedrich Engels’s theories about
applying the laws of physics to societal development processes. According to
Engels, as quoted in Stalin’s 1938 Short Course on the History of the
Bolsheviks, this process of change is akin to water heating or freezing:
The temperature of
water has at first no effect on its liquid state; but as the temperature of
liquid water rises or falls, a moment arrives when this state of cohesion
changes and the water is converted in one case into steam and in the other into
ice.
In the Short
Course—the most widely published book in the Soviet Union during Stalin’s
rule and, as the China expert John Garnaut has pointed out, the closest thing
to a religious text in 1950s China—Stalin and his co-authors explain that this
“science of history” helps the enlightened to see patterns and significant
trends where others might see only “a jumble of accidents and . . . absurd
mistakes.”
Xi believes that we
are today witnessing a “qualitative leap” in world affairs, where China has
moved to center stage, and the U.S.-anchored Western order is breaking down. As
Xi said in his speech published in April 2021:
The world today is
undergoing a great change in situation unseen in a century. Since the most
recent period, the most important characteristic of the world is, in a word,
“chaos,” and this trend appears likely to continue.
New Politburo
Standing Committee members Xi Jinping, Li Qiang, Zhao
Leji, Wang Huning, Cai Qi,
Ding Xuexiang, and Li Xi in Beijing, October 2022
Xi depicts the
current historical period as one of significant risk and opportunity. His
“historical mission” is to exploit the inflection point and push history along
its inexorable course through a “struggle,” which includes identifying internal
and external enemies, isolating them, and mobilizing the party and its acolytes
against them.
Xi expanded on these
ideas in an impassioned address to the Sixth Plenum meeting of Communist Party
leaders in November 2021, lauding Mao’s 1950 decision to send “volunteers”
across the Yalu River into Korea to fight the U.S. and UN forces commanded by
U.S. General Douglas MacArthur.
Comrade Mao Zedong,
with the . . . strategic foresight of “by starting with one punch, one hundred
punches will be avoided,” and the determination and bravery of “do not hesitate
to ruin the country internally in order to build it anew,” made the historical
policy decision to resist America and aid Korea and protect the nation, avoid
the dangerous situation of invaders camping at the gates, and defend the
security of New China.
Xi’s speech strongly
endorsed the CCP’s “decisive measures” to crush the student protests at
Tiananmen Square in 1989 and withstand “the pressure of Western countries’
so-called sanctions” that followed. This saved the party, in Xi’s telling, and
today “the CCP, the People’s Republic of China, and the Chinese nation have the
most reason to be self-confident” of any “political party, country, or nation”
in the world. The statements leave little doubt that Xi would be willing to
adopt “decisive measures” again today if less violent means to disperse
demonstrations failed.
Like many of Xi’s
most aggressive and essential statements, his Sixth Plenum speech was initially
kept secret. It was delivered behind closed doors and published in Qiushi magazine nearly two months later. The CCP does not
appear to have issued an official English translation of it, and Western news
outlets all but ignored the speech.
But just over a year
later, its implications have become clear: regardless of near-term economic
considerations for China, Xi is being guided by ideology and his firmly held
diagnosis that the West is declining and that Beijing, led forcefully by Xi
himself, must take risks and act decisively to assert new spheres of influence
and build a world conducive to Marxist autocracy.
Marxist Means And Ends
Xi Jinping Thought
clarifies that Marxism is the means to achieving global supremacy and the goal
of that supremacy. “Karl Marx dedicated his entire life to overthrowing the old
world and establishing a new world,” Xi said in 2018 while presiding over
Marx’s 200th birthday celebration in Beijing—an event surrounded by weeks of
propaganda and publications timed to establish Xi as the designated heir to
Marx, Lenin, Stalin, and Mao. Xi called the German theorist “the greatest
thinker in human history” and decreed that “Marxism is not to be kept hidden in
books. It was created to change the destiny of human history.”
This phrasing evoked
a major foreign policy initiative Xi has embraced called “A Community of Common
Destiny for Mankind,” which aims to shape the global environment in ways
favorable to Beijing’s authoritarian model. (The ominous-sounding term “common
destiny” is often misleadingly translated by the CCP into the more anodyne
English phrase “shared future.”) Xi’s 2018 speech clarified that the initiative
and Marx’s vision of a stateless, collectivized world are linked.
“Just like Marx, we
must struggle for communism our entire lives,” Xi said. “A collectivized world
is just there, over [the horizon]. Whoever rejects that the world will reject
the world.”
Ian Easton, an
American researcher, discovered a recent set of People’s Liberation Army
textbooks focused on Xi’s ideology that elaborates further on the link between
Xi’s foreign policy and global communism. These books, edited by top educators
and administrators at National Defense University and labeled as “internal
teaching materials” for senior military officers, can be taken as
authoritative. In China, the military is subordinate to the party, not the
state, and ideological training figures heavily in the education of officers.
Xi has described the National Defense University as “an important base” for
training China’s officer corps.
Passages from the
textbooks, cited in Easton’s 2022 book, The Final Struggle: Inside
China’s Global Strategy, underscore the idea that overturning U.S.
leadership around the globe is only one phase of Xi’s plan. Xi also seeks to
upend the concept of equal and sovereign states that emerged from Europe four
centuries ago and is the cornerstone of international relations, according to
the texts. One of them, Strategic Support for Achieving the Great
Chinese Rejuvenation, explains:
The Westphalian
System was founded on the notion of a balance of power. But it has proven unable
to achieve a stable world order. All mankind needs a new order that surpasses
and supplants the balance of power. Today, the age in which a few strong
Western powers could work together to decide world affairs is already gone and
will not come back. A new world order is now under construction that will
surpass and supplant the Westphalian System.
This and the other
textbooks leave no doubt that the system that replaces the 1648 Treaties of
Westphalia must be the socialist model made in China. “As we push for the
fusion of the world’s civilizations based on developing our nation’s unique
civilization, there are several things that must be done,” reads one passage.
“[We] must insist on taking the road of development with Chinese cultural
characteristics. . . . And we must insist on our principles and our bottom line
as we actively engage with others.”
Another passage
states: “The Community of Common Destiny for Mankind will mold the interests of
the Chinese people and those of the world’s people together.” At another point,
that exact text clarifies who has decreed this approach: “Xi Jinping has
emphasized that our state’s ideology and social system are fundamentally
incompatible with the West. Xi has said, ‘This determines that our struggle and
contest with Western countries is irreconcilable, so it will inevitably be
long, complicated, and sometimes even very sharp.’” The textbook’s authors took
the term “very sharp” to mean violent. The book continues: “To use war to
protect our national interests is not in contradiction with peaceful
development. Such is a manifestation of Marxist strategy.”
In the meantime, the
book advocates weaponizing economic dependence and greed: “We must gain a grip
on foreign government leaders and their business elites by encouraging our
companies to invest in their local economies.”
Struggle Session
Xi further codified
this view of China’s mission at the party congress in October, as he adjusted
the official language to match his vision and made personnel changes to reflect
his control of the CCP and the preeminence of his thinking. One way this was
achieved was through editing: Xi led the congress in unanimously voting to
insert the word “struggle” into the Party Charter in several more places. These
changes were missed by some foreign observers, perhaps because the CCP’s
English-language propaganda selectively mistranslated the word “struggle,”
using euphemisms such as “persistent hard work.” But the term now rivals
references to “reform and opening” in the charter, signaling that Beijing’s
focus will now be even more on confronting perceived enemies at home and abroad
and less on growing the economy.
The personnel changes
at the top of the party suggest much the same. In a difficult-to-parse sequence
of events during the proceedings, Xi’s elderly predecessor Hu Jintao was
removed, seemingly against his will, from his seat next to Xi on a dais in the
Great Hall of the People. That might have been passed off as clumsy
choreography or perhaps as a response to some medical issue. But soon
afterward, Xi dumped all three of Hu’s allies from the Politburo, replaced them
with personal loyalists, and elevated military industrialists and
security-apparatus officials in place of officials with national-level economic
experience. These changes made Hu’s removal appear more like a public
humiliation.
Xi’s picks to lead
the military—the two vice chairs of the Central Military Commission, of which
Xi himself is chair—further signal his disruptive geopolitical ambitions. Xi
reappointed Zhang Youxia as the first vice chair,
despite Zhang’s advanced age (72), which put him well past the typical
retirement age. (Zhang’s father fought alongsideXiXi
in China’s civil war.)
For the second
vice-chair seat, Xi selected He Weidong; a
65-year-old focused on joint operations and experience on China’s contested
frontiers. He commanded ground forces in China’s West during a high tension
(and some bloodshed) with India, then led the Taiwan-focused eastern theater,
where he oversaw a dress rehearsal for war following U.S. House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi’s visit to the island in August. But to become vice chair, he required a
double promotion.
In short, Xi’s new
leadership team appears tailormade for “the spirit of struggle” and for the
“high winds and waves” and “stormy seas of a major test” that he referred to in
his work report to the Party Congress. One wonders whether he had Taiwan in
mind when he chose those particular words.
Warming Up To “Containment”
In May, U.S.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken gave a significant address laying out the Biden
administration’s China policy. “We are not looking for conflict or a new cold
war,” Blinken asserted in his speech. “To the contrary, we’re determined to
avoid both.”
The Biden
administration avoided using the Cold War term “containment” to describe its
approach to China, and Blinken did not use that term in his speech. But what he
told echoes Washington's successful approach in contesting the Soviet Union. A
senior American official explained in a briefing to preview Blinken’s speech
that U.S. policy is focused on “constraining Beijing’s ability to engage in
coercive practices.” Washington seeks to work with allies to “leverage our
collective strength” and “close off vulnerabilities that China can exploit.”
Blinken summed it up in these terms in his address: “We cannot rely on Beijing
to change its trajectory. So we will shape the strategic environment around
Beijing to advance our vision for an open, inclusive international system.”
This is not quite
containment, but it bears a family resemblance. “Constrainment”
is the term that one of us (Pottinger) has used to describe it. A policy of
containment, unlike containment, accounts for the current realities of economic
interdependence and seeks to tilt them to Washington’s advantage. Containment
should seek to puncture Beijing’s confidence that it can achieve its aims
through war and sap Beijing’s optimism that it can decisively accumulate
coercive economic leverage over the United States and other democracies.
Putin’s belief that
western Europe had become too dependent on Russian energy to oppose his armored
assault on Kyiv meaningfully appears to have been a significant factor in his
decision to re-invade Ukraine. Xi is working to acquire similar coercive
leverage—the “powerful countermeasure” of “international production chains’
dependence on China”—in semiconductor manufacturing and other high-tech inputs
to the global economy. An allied constrainment policy
would avoid falling into this trap and extricate the United States, which it
has already stumbled into one. In essence, Washington and its allies must adopt
the opposite of Germany’s corporatist, an antistrategic
foreign policy that tethered European prosperity to the whims of adversarial
“Führer states,” to borrow Wolfgang Ischinger and
Sebastian Turner’s apt phrase.
Rules regarding
semiconductors that the Biden administration issued in October take an
essential step in the right direction. Beijing currently must import hundreds
of billions of dollars worth of chips annually—a
dependence that Washington should work to sustain. The essential elements of
the new rules are limits on importing chip-making equipment and U.S. skilled
labor to China. If enforced diligently, the authorities will foil Xi’s ambition
to make China the world’s largest chipmaker and erode its goal of commanding
the high-tech supply chains of its trade partners.
That dynamic is the
essence of constrainment, which should strive to
maintain a favorable balance of dependence in many areas. A policy of
containment should, for example, strengthen the dominance of the U.S. dollar as
a global reserve and trading currency, extending Washington’s ability to
monitor and punish money laundering, weapons proliferation, bribery, and other
dangerous actions by Beijing. Containment should remind Beijing of its
dependence on foreign food and energy sources while reversing the United State's growing reliance on Chinese batteries, solar
panels, and other “green” technology.
Containment would
also rectify the lead Beijing has, incredibly, opened over the United States in
global Internet governance and control of information and data flows. The fact
that ByteDance, a Chinese company, controls
TikTok—the fastest-growing news and video content outlet in the United
States—represents a potentially grave failure by Washington to protect
democracy and free speech. TikTok’s algorithms, whose source code Beijing has
restricted from being transferred out of China, could be modified to suppress
or amplify content according to the CCP’s preferences, which would give China
the ability to influence the views of tens of millions of Americans. Zhang Fuping, who serves as editor-in-chief of ByteDance, is also the secretary of the company’s Communist
Party Committee, tasked with ensuring the company’s alignment with the CCP’s
interests. According to a report in Sina
Finance, at a meeting in 2018, Zhang declared that the company should
“‘take the lead’ across ‘all product lines and business lines to ensure that
the algorithm is informed by the ‘correct political direction’ and ‘values.’”
And according to a report in Taiwan News, in 2019, ByteDance
signed an agreement with the Ministry of Public Security’s Press and Publicity
Bureau pledging to boost “network influence and online discourse power” and
enhance “public security propaganda, guidance, influence, and credibility.”
TikTok and other
content apps based in China or owned by Chinese firms represent potentially
powerful instruments for censorship and mass manipulation; Washington should
ban their use, just as India’s government has wisely done. If the CCP wants to
influence international audiences, it should depend on digital platforms
domiciled in, regulated by, and accountable to democracies.
The contest between
democracies and China will increasingly turn on the balance of dependence;
whichever side depends least on the other will have the advantage. Reducing
Washington’s support, and increasing Beijing’s, can help constrain Xi’s
appetite for risk. When coupled with U.S. cooperation with Australia, Japan,
and Taiwan to field an unmistakably superior and well-coordinated military
presence in the western Pacific, constrained offers the best way to prevent the
“stormy seas of a major test” that Xi seems tempted to undertake as he begins
his second decade as China’s dictator.
For updates click hompage here