Overreach: China, America, and the New Cold War

Overreach: China, America, and the New Cold War

  • Downloads:7429
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-10-23 06:52:30
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Susan Shirk
  • ISBN:0190068515
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

A sobering, penetrating, and illuminating examination of Chinese-US relations, what has contributed to their deterioration, and what it means for the future。

Relations between China and the United States have deteriorated to the point that, in Susan Shirk's assessment, we are now fully embroiled in Cold War II。 Combining her decades of research and experience, Shirk, one of the world's most respected experts on Chinese history and policy, focuses on this
collapse in relations。 Military flashpoints have increased in number and frequency, and rather than acting as trade partners, the two countries view economic competition in zero-sum terms。 As Shirk notes, China and the United States have become so fearful of one another that they are weaponizing
their interdependence。 Not even the common threat of the COVID-19 pandemic could convince them to coordinate their efforts。

Overreach assesses how things got to this point。 Using her decades of research, analysis, and first-hand experience, Shirk sheds light on China's politics and its evolving role on the world's stage。 She opens the black box of China's political system and looks at what lies behind its attempt to
expand soft and hard power abroad。 Prior to the global financial crisis in 2008, China seemed willing to engage with domestic and international issues in a constructive manner。 Following the crisis, however, power dynamics shifted, and so, too, did China's approach。 It began to view the U。S。 as a
declining superpower, one China was well on its way to supplanting。 Internationally, China began to act more belligerently with its neighbors。 Internally, circumstances have enabled Xi Jinping to consolidate more power than any leader since Mao Zedong。

Clearly, China has changed。 In this sobering, penetrating, and illuminating book, one of the world's leading experts looks not just at how things got to this point but what lies ahead, and how it could affect us all。

Download

Reviews

Patrick

Easy to get turned off by the hawkish and opinionated premise but actually an excellent book。 A readable but serious and thorough review of key foreign policy trends in China, and a carefully researched view on what’s driving those trends。 Super interesting insights into the “black box” of Chinese elite governance。 The focus on the bureaucracy causes some important issues, Taiwan for example, to be obscured。

Geoffrey

Highly recommended look at how China has, through its ineffective and fragmented top political leadership during the Hu era to the last ten (and still counting) personalistic years of the Xi era, has overreached and overextended itself, economically, politically and strategically, and has ended up creating a far more hostile, isolated and difficult position for itself。