Can America and China be Friends Again?



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37 thoughts on “Can America and China be Friends Again?”

  1. Like Russia in the way of its western and southern borders, China sees it's Pacific region as its sphere of influence. Unfortunately for China, many of the countries in the area are in military alliances with the US. This will always place a strain on the relationship with the US in the same way that NATO is a natural barrier to better relations with Russia.

    Reply
  2. Lol, strategic adversaries like the US and Russia!?!

    We are long past "the rivalry period" with them.
    You say "certainly not last indefinitely". How exactly is this CERTAIN!?! Just because not all rivalries last does NOT mean every rivalry won't last

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  3. No. Mazarr may be too optimistic on the prospects of change, though I do appreciate his cautious stance on 'victory' over China. CCP members and their families benefit too much from that power structure to want it to end. A democratic system would likely end their wealth and seek restitution or punishment.

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  4. If the US and China should have a peaceful resolution, the first step is for the US to have a Democrat president. In the US, usually it is the Republicans that are anti-China and most Democrats have ambiguous views towards China. Obama remained on pretty good terms with China, and I bet people like Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsome secretly admire China’s authoritarian regime.

    The Democrats are globalists and basically neo-Marxist at this point. The cunning thing about the CCP is that they invite international firms to invest heavily in China, so they become an integral part of the globalist agenda. The Republicans believe in America first, and Trump has set the tone pretty clear that China is a great rival. Forcing regime change in China will almost certainly lead to war, so, until the globalists find another country to do their bidding, China and the US will be mutually dependent but rivals.

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  5. All i can see is the world transferring from a unipolar world where the US dominates all to a multipolar world where no one single nation has the hegemony. And considering what the US did since the last 70 years (constant wars, sanctions, meddling and coups) I can't see any other nation harming global peace more. Instead I think the world as a whole will improve.

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  6. No they can't. USA and China are two systems that want to be world hegemons and impose their will on others. Two tigers cannot live together on the same mountain, two kings cannot rule same kingdom. Someone must fall.

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  7. You talk about The US trying to ‘persuade’ China as if it was a dovish and peaceful actor. In fact the US effectively declared war the day it bombed the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade in 1995. I don’t know if such an important omission is meant to mislead viewers or because you ‘just didn’t know’ but you could also have added further perspective in your analysis, especially when quoting some of the authors’ claims about the US having values of Freedom and Human Rights when – in fact- the US has supported Dictarial Regimes in Chile, Peru, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Many others…and is does not promote Human Rights in Gaza.

    This is about Power and Resources and Talk of values is merely War Propaganda Speak.

    Reply
  8. China could lighten up, give up on this ultra nationalist ideology and accept that they will never be dominant asa bully, only as a fiar trade partner. They also need to fix their quality and corner cutting culture..aka tofu dreg, toxic food, etc… Other than that, NO.

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  9. A democratic/western liberal China would be so powerful, ,,teaming up" with the US.
    It definitely has potential, but I think it could only come if the CCP and it's system were to collapse like how the Soviet Union did.
    That remains to be seen, but sure thing is that China demographic and economic problems and the possible Taiwan conflict pose a significant threat.
    I can imagine a world where these problems lead to the collapse of the CCP. But I also think the US should step up then avoid the mistakes with post-soviet Russia, because that in the long-term turned out to be a pretty big headache.
    So I definitely see potential for China in the future, maybe much more as in a European Federation or a democractic Russia emerging as a new, strong but friendly partner for the USA.

    Reply

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