Tag
International order
China Keeps the Upper Hand, South China Sea Arbitration Ruling Nonwithstanding
By William G. Frasure
The judicial ruling could actually give China the advantage, if Beijing proves it can flout the law with impunity.
The Logic of Closer US-India Relations
By Namrata Goswami and Namrata Goswami
The hurdles that obstructed the relationship in the past are no longer influential.
Interview: Anja Manuel
By Shannon Tiezzi
How China and India will shape the world.
Don't Forget About China's Big UN Speech
By Shannon Tiezzi
With all the hype on Xi Jinping's US visit, it's easy to overlook his speech at the UN. Don't.
Did the United States Ever Really Have a China Strategy?
By Robert Farley
Instead of engaging China, the United States could (with great cost) have isolated it.
Yes, the US Does Want to Contain China (Sort Of)
By Shannon Tiezzi
There isn't a strict policy of containment, but the sentiment remains.
How America and China Have Different Visions of International Order
By Alek Chance
One man’s leadership is another man’s hegemony.
AIIB: Who's a Revisionist Anyway?
By Robert Farley
Not all revisionists are global revisionists.
Why Shouldn't China Change the International Rules?
By Jin Kai
China is often accused of wanting to "change the rules." Is that automatically a bad thing?
Is China Threatening or Defending the Postwar Regional Order?
By Jin Kai
China believes that it is defending, rather than upsetting, the post WW2 regional order.
China at the Helm of New BRICS Bank
By Tyler Roney
BRICS is making some bold moves, and China is in the driver's seat.
Why the 'China Dream' Doesn’t Challenge US Global Leadership
By Jin Kai
The 'China Dream' is a vision for China itself, not a blueprint for overthrowing the US-led global system.