Discussion:
Why China Isn’t Scared of Trump
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ltlee1
2024-12-23 00:27:31 UTC
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"Beijing does not believe that the outcome of the 2024 presidential
election in the United States has much bearing on the overall trajectory
of U.S. policy toward China. No matter who entered the White House, the
next president of the United States would be backed by a bipartisan
consensus that perceives China as a threat to U.S. global dominance and
would keep trying to contain China.
..

Those who anticipate a darkening cold war between China and Trump’s
United States are misguided. The United States’ competition with China
is not over ideology—as it was with the Soviet Union—but over
technology. In the digital age, security and prosperity depend hugely on
technological progress. China and the United States will battle over
innovation in fields such as artificial intelligence and wrestle over
markets and high-technology supply chains. They will not—and certainly
not under Trump—seek to convert others to their preferred governing
ideology. The Soviet Union and the United States used proxy wars to
spread communism and capitalism, respectively. The global South, in
particular, still feels the echoes of the devastation and upheaval these
wars unleashed around the world. Today, however, proxy conflicts between
the great powers serve little purpose. ...

In great power competition, foreign policy can often play second fiddle
to domestic policy. ... reforms at home will really determine the course
of the competition between the two powers. "
ltlee1
2024-12-23 00:28:03 UTC
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https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/why-china-isnt-scared-trump
ltlee1
2024-12-24 02:18:24 UTC
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"I just spent a week in Beijing and Shanghai, meeting with Chinese
officials, economists and entrepreneurs, and let me get right to the
point: While we were sleeping China took a great leap forward in
high-tech manufacturing of everything.

If no one has told Donald Trump, then I will: His nickname on Chinese
social media today is “Chuan Jianguo” — meaning “Trump the (Chinese)
Nation Builder” — because of how his relentless China bashing and
tariffs during his first term as president lit a fire under Beijing to
double down on its efforts to gain global supremacy in electric cars,
robots and rare materials, and to become as independent of America’s
markets and tools as possible.

“China had its Sputnik moment — his name was Donald Trump,” Jim
McGregor, a business consultant who lived in China for 30 years, told
me. “He woke them up to the fact that they needed an all-hands-on-deck
effort to take their indigenous scientific, innovative and advanced
manufacturing skills to a new level.”"

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/17/opinion/us-china-musk-swift-tariffs-manufacturing.html
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