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The Long Game: China's Grand Strategy to Displace American Order Copertina rigida – 11 novembre 2021

4,4 su 5 stelle 487 voti

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Given the turbulence in the international order in recent years, one of the central concerns among observers of world politics is the question of China's ultimate goals. As China emerges as a superpower that rivals the United States, American policymakers grappling with this century's greatest geopolitical challenge are looking for answers to a series of critical questions. Does China have expansive ambitions? Does it have a grand strategy to achieve them? If so, what is it and what should the United States do about it?

In
The Long Game, Rush Doshi draws from a rich base of Chinese primary sources, including decades worth of party documents, leaked materials, and memoirs by party leaders, to demonstrate that China is in fact playing a long, methodical game to replace America as a regional and global hegemon. He traces the basic evolution of Chinese strategy, showing how it evolved in response to changes in US policy and its position in the world order. After charting these shifts over time, Doshi offers a comprehensive yet "asymmetric" plan for an effective US response to this challenge: one that undermines China's ambitions without competing dollar-for-dollar, ship-for-ship, or loan-for-loan. Ironically, the approach mirrors China's own current strategy of subtly weakening Chinese leverage in the region and elsewhere while expanding US leverage over China.

A bold assessment of what the Chinese government's true foreign policy objectives are,
The Long Game offers valuable insight to the most important rivalry in world politics.

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Descrizione prodotto

Recensione

Highly Recommended ― M. G. Roskin, CHOICE

The most important book on China in years ―
John Pomfret, Washington Post

One of the "Best Books of 2021 ―
Financial Times

"[Doshi has] meticulously laid bare the Party's methodical advance toward global supremacy. China watchers craving a broad understanding of the Party's geopolitical thought and actions won't be disappointed. ―
David Wilezol, Wall Street Journal

As the US and China slip towards a new cold war, Doshi argues that Beijing is pursuing a long-term plan to displace the US as the world's most powerful nation. The verdict may sound sensationalist, but it is carefully argued and backed by deep research and primary sources. ―
Gideon Rachman, Financial Times

[Doshi] makes his own case powerfully, with reference to an impressive array of highly authoritative Chinese texts ―
The Economist

Of all the books to appear on this subject in 2021, this will be the one most closely read....Unlike many other Western writers on Chinese strategy, Doshi draws on a deep knowledge of the CCP's voluminous internal and public deliberations. ―
Niall Ferguson, The Times Literary Supplement

What does China tell itself about itself? This isn't a rhetorical question. Rush Doshi's
The Long Game is a high wattage black light that helps us explore and make sense of China's strategic ambitions to understand their grand strategy ― General CQ Brown, Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force

Rush Doshi's landmark new book fills in key gaps in the United States' understanding of China's strategy and what it means for U.S. policy. ―
The Council on Foreign Relations

[A] valuable book...[Doshi] quotes extensively from the often obscure writings and speeches of Chinese leaders and thinkers. ―
Andrew Nathan, Foreign Affairs

Brilliant, bracing and empirically rich...It may well turn out to be the one single book that distills both the Chinese approach to the world and the broad contours of Sino-American competition. ―
The Indian Express

Rush Doshi's account of China's global strategy in The Long Game is a welcome draft of cold air. ―
Claremont Review of Books

60 pages of painstaking footnotes, many of them quoting internal statements by Communist Party leaders and intellectuals, make it rather compelling. ―
Pete Sweeney, Reuters

One of the Top Political Books of 2021 ―
The Hill

The Long Game brings what's been largely missing from debate on US-China relations: historically informed insight into the nature of China's Leninist system and strategy. ― Kevin Rudd, President of the Asia Society and former Prime Minister of Australia

The Long Game is essential in understanding China's approach to the evolving US-China relationship and global order. Unique in scope and unmatched in substance, Rush Doshi's masterfully researched work describes clearly the economic, political, and military contours of China's strategic approach. The observations, analysis, and recommendations of this superb work must be foundational to any China playbook-business, political, or military. ― Admiral Gary Roughead, U.S. Navy (Retired)

Using primary sources and crisp analysis, Rush Doshi decodes Beijing's grand strategy of the last three decades. In the process, he exposes the threadbare assumptions that caused countless American policymakers, intelligence analysts, and scholars to misjudge the intentions and capacities of China's rulers. Wishful thinkers, isolationists, and accommodationists will marshal no credible counterarguments to the central findings of this superb book. ―
Matt Pottinger, Former Deputy National Security Advisor

What does China want?' Rush Doshi makes such a cogent case, based on a wealth of Chinese textual and behavioral evidence, that China's consistent strategy has been to displace the United States that he persuades me to re-examine my view that China's aims are open-ended and malleable. His compelling book should become an instant classic in the China field and required reading for everyone trying to figure out America's own best strategy toward China. ―
Susan Shirk, Professor and Chair of the 21st Century China Center, University of California-San Diego

A must-read for anyone wrestling with the China Challenge. Doshi's careful analysis of Chinese language documents make a powerful case that China is pursuing a coherent grand strategy to overturn the US-led international order. ―
Graham Allison, Professor of Government, Harvard Kennedy School

Doshi has brilliantly limned a new framework for understanding both the global ambition and the strategic challenges posed by Xi Jinping and his 'wolf warrior diplomacy.' If you're looking for the one book that best illuminates the historical logic of his unrepentant 'China Dream,'
The Long Game isit. ― Orville Schell, Director, Center on US-China Policy, the Asia Society

Based on a careful reading of a vast array of Chinese sources, Rush Doshi presents a novel and compelling account of the evolution of Beijing's grand strategy. Doshi argues persuasively that shifts in China's behavior are driven by the Communist Party's collective assessment of trends in the global balance of power rather than by the personalities or preferences of individual leaders. The implications are not reassuring: China's increasingly open and aggressive attempts to displace the US and transform the international system began before Xi Jinping took power and will likely persist after he is gone. This important and insightful book should be required reading for scholars and policymakers alike. ―
Aaron L. Friedberg, Professor or Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University

The debate over whether China has a strategy to displace American leadership in Asia is over. Now comes the first authoritative account of what that strategy is. Using a vast array of original sources, Rush Doshi does unprecedented forensic work on the origins of Chinese grand strategy and itsprospects for success. ―
Michael J. Green, author of By More than Providence: Grand Strategy and American Power in the Asia-Pacific since 1783

If you doubt that China has been pursuing a long-term, comprehensive strategy to achieve global primacy, read Rush Doshi's book. In this brilliant, definitive work, Doshi details the vaulting ambition of Beijing's agenda. Everyone interested in the future of American power and world order should read it now-or weep later. ―
Hal Brands, Johns Hopkins University and American Enterprise Institute

L'autore

Rush Doshi is Director of the Brookings China Strategy Initiative and a Fellow in Brookings Foreign Policy. He is also a Fellow at Yale Law School's Paul Tsai China Center, Special Advisor to the CEO of the Asia Group, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at the Center for a New American Security, and an intelligence officer in the US Navy Reserve. Dr. Doshi was a member of the Asia Policy Working Group for Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign, an analyst at the Long Term Strategy Group and Rock Creek Global Advisors, an Arthur Liman Fellow at the Department of State, and a Fulbright Fellow in China. His research has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Foreign Affairs, the Washington Post, International Organization, and the Washington Quarterly, among other publications, and he has testified before the US Congress.

Dettagli prodotto

  • Editore ‏ : ‎ OUP USA (11 novembre 2021)
  • Lingua ‏ : ‎ Inglese
  • Copertina rigida ‏ : ‎ 432 pagine
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0197527914
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0197527917
  • Peso articolo ‏ : ‎ 780 g
  • Dimensioni ‏ : ‎ 16.43 x 3.66 x 23.85 cm
  • Recensioni dei clienti:
    4,4 su 5 stelle 487 voti

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487 valutazioni globali

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  • Recensito in Italia il 24 gennaio 2022
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  • Kindle Customergraham
    1,0 su 5 stelle Boring
    Recensito in Australia il 3 marzo 2022
    1000s of boring facts . How to say in 400 pages what could be said in one page . Stating the obvious . Insights that most of us are already aware of apart from the aforementioned boring facts
    Segnala
  • Amazon Customer
    5,0 su 5 stelle Very interesting book
    Recensito in India il 23 agosto 2021
    This is a very interesting book about the geopolitical competition between China and the United States of America and its various aspects.
  • G B
    1,0 su 5 stelle Size of print in book is too small. El tamaño de la impresión en el libro es demasiado pequeño.
    Recensito in Messico il 30 agosto 2021
    I read at night in a good light but not daylight. The size of the print in the book is too small for me to be able to read it even with glasses that multiple 2 times which I bought because I wanted to read the book. As to the book itself I therefore have no comments because I cannot read it. I am tempted to return it.
    Leo por la noche con buena luz, pero no a la luz del día. El tamaño de la impresión en el libro es demasiado pequeño para que pueda leerlo incluso con gafas que 2 veces que compré porque quería leer el libro. En cuanto al libro en sí, por lo tanto, no tengo comentarios porque no puedo leerlo. Estoy tentado a devolverlo.
  • Jonathan
    4,0 su 5 stelle Gives a great overview of the CCP's strategy and mindset
    Recensito nel Regno Unito il 3 giugno 2023
    An invaluable resource on understanding how Chinese leaders approached the end of the Cold War period, written in a way that tells it like a story and details the Chinese Communist Party's reactions to the US' encroachment of Asia. One can gain a great understanding about China's foreign policy, particularly in the post-Cold War, looking at how Beijing saw other regimes fall to US foreign policy and how it learned the lessons from these events. Gives an insightful overview of how China has gradually managed to rival the US as a rising power, from a way that can shape the US' response to Beijing's rise. Great use of primary sources from the CCP though.
  • A. Menon
    5,0 su 5 stelle Very insightful perspective on the political strategy of the CCP through time
    Recensito negli Stati Uniti il 3 settembre 2021
    This book is a well timed publication and a very useful resource to think about China's foreign policy strategy and its ultimate view on the changing nature of the global power distribution. There has been a marked deterioration of relations between China and the US that is finding itself very difficult, if not impossible to change course. The global pandemic has worsened relations and shown how the different systems are responding to a changing world in very different ways. Aggressive regulatory changes in China as well have damaged foreign investments and shown China to be increasingly insular with respect to funding its investment needs and all of these issues can be better understood through this latest book by Rush Doshi.

    The approach of The Long Game is quite novel. The author, through party publications, pieces together what he sees as China's foreign policy intentions and in particular the parties strategy and goals with regards to rivalry with the US. The author argues that China has always had a long term strategy with respect to its foreign policy ambitions with the US which started out as China biding its time as it built up its strength to now being more assertive as it views the US to be in visible decline. The author highlights how there has been a coherence to China's strategy through the similarities of Chinese leaders speeches and that Xi is continuing a tradition not breaking into a new paradigm. The author brings up concepts like asymmetric strategies where China focused on blunting US power earlier rather than projecting its own by using lower cost strategies which effectively caused the opponent to spend poorly. The author now advocates the US take this cue themself and focus on blunting China rather than projecting its power explicitly. The author frames the discussion of the China naval strategy in this context.

    The author also highlights how the party saw the financial crisis as the event which indicated the decline of US power and the opportunity for China to assert itself with a weakened rival. The author highlights how China's institution building has been a calculated exercise to reconstruct regional institutions around their interests and driven by their political goals. In particular the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank and One Belt One Road initiative are discussed at length. The Chinese obstinance on any western generated institution building exercise is also discussed and framed in terms of China's blunting strategy. The author spends a lot of time trying to give a picture of how Chinese policy makers see the world and the unfair balance that comes from US hegemony given that they increasingly view their sphere of influence as being trampled, while of course the US would frame the situation as entirely reversed. One does get a fair perspective on how US actions are seen to be driven by self interest rather than by some set of ideals, which is how US foreign policy is often framed (which is increasingly unconvincing).

    Overall the Long Game provides insight that makes sense of the transition of the China, US relationship. That gives some ability to deduce that frictions will remain structural and the regional and global rivalry between the US and China will likely continue to increase as a new balance is formed. Furthermore one gets a sense that the divergence between systems is getting more entrenched rather than reversionary as China increasingly views their system as a superior substitute to a decaying Western Liberalism which is decaying from within. The book also gives some strategic perspective on how to approach China and how it will be a difficult counterparty to satisfy. Much of recent events can be understood better as part of a strategic game, both economic and political, that is currently being played. For that reason alone this is a valuable book to have read.