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Has China won? : the Chinese challenge to American primacy / Kishore Mahbubani.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : PublicAffairs, 2020.Edition: 1st edDescription: vii, 310 p. : illISBN:
  • 9781541768130 (hbk.)
  • 1541768132 (hbk.)
  • 9781541758674 (pbk.)
  • 1541758676 (pbk.)
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • D740.4 .M35 2020
Contents:
Introduction -- China's Biggest Strategic Mistake -- America's Biggest Strategic Mistake -- Is China Expansionist? -- Can America Make U-Turns? -- Should China Become Democratic? -- The Assumption of Virtue -- How Will Other Countries Choose? -- A Paradoxical Conclusion.
Summary: "The twenty-first century's great geopolitical contest has begun. A major trade war has broken out. American and Chinese naval vessels are having close encounters in the South China Sea. American congressmen and businessmen are cheering their government's public attacks on China. China is standing firm and resolute. Who will win this contest? What is at stake? And who will judge the winner? In this book, Kishore Mahbubani evaluates the two sides, and shows how China has been thinking on a global scale, launching ambitious initiatives under some of the world's most pragmatic and competent leaders. Most critically, the Chinese people have regained their cultural confidence. Chinese society is now infused with innovation and dynamism. Meanwhile, America has seen the power of its economic model badly damaged by the 2008 financial crisis. To many it is no longer the indispensable nation but an awkward interloper. The global rise of China and the relative strategic decline of the US presents a political challenge that the US has never faced before. American policymakers must shake off their complacency and launch a major strategic reboot of both domestic and foreign policies that have weakened the nation's social foundations and global standing. Otherwise, the start-up nation, barely two hundred and fifty years old, with only a quarter of China's population, cannot expect to defeat the world's oldest continuous civilization. With his trademark candor, Mahbubani delivers impartial and incisive insights on the strategic stakes and mistakes in this new great game".
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Item type Home library Shelving location Call number Status Barcode
Books Books Punsarn Library General Stacks D740.4 .M35 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available PNLIB21061637
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction -- China's Biggest Strategic Mistake -- America's Biggest Strategic Mistake -- Is China Expansionist? -- Can America Make U-Turns? -- Should China Become Democratic? -- The Assumption of Virtue -- How Will Other Countries Choose? -- A Paradoxical Conclusion.

"The twenty-first century's great geopolitical contest has begun. A major trade war has broken out. American and Chinese naval vessels are having close encounters in the South China Sea. American congressmen and businessmen are cheering their government's public attacks on China. China is standing firm and resolute. Who will win this contest? What is at stake? And who will judge the winner? In this book, Kishore Mahbubani evaluates the two sides, and shows how China has been thinking on a global scale, launching ambitious initiatives under some of the world's most pragmatic and competent leaders. Most critically, the Chinese people have regained their cultural confidence. Chinese society is now infused with innovation and dynamism. Meanwhile, America has seen the power of its economic model badly damaged by the 2008 financial crisis. To many it is no longer the indispensable nation but an awkward interloper. The global rise of China and the relative strategic decline of the US presents a political challenge that the US has never faced before. American policymakers must shake off their complacency and launch a major strategic reboot of both domestic and foreign policies that have weakened the nation's social foundations and global standing. Otherwise, the start-up nation, barely two hundred and fifty years old, with only a quarter of China's population, cannot expect to defeat the world's oldest continuous civilization. With his trademark candor, Mahbubani delivers impartial and incisive insights on the strategic stakes and mistakes in this new great game".

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