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- 1From:The New York TimesInstead of focusing on a solution to the war in Ukraine, the Chinese leader's visit to Moscow reinforced China and Russia's shared opposition to American dominance. China's leader, Xi Jinping, flew into Moscow this...
- 2From:The Washington PostByline: Olivier Knox and Caroline Anders "There is a risk," French President Emmanuel Macron warned during his recent state visit, that the United States may see transatlantic relations through the prism of its rivalry...
- 3From:New Zealand International Review (Vol. 47, Issue 6)Intensified geopolitical competition between great powers has led many to suggest a new Cold War is unfolding, with unavoidable repercussions for other states and the world order. There are three key questions relating...
- 4From:The Washington PostByline: Ellen Francis Britain's national security adviser has warned that a breakdown in dialogue between rival powers is raising the risk of nuclear war, with fewer safeguards now than during the Cold War. Western...
- 5From:The New York TimesWho knows, at this writing, what Vladimir Putin will decide to do with the forces he's massed along Ukraine's borders? If Putin backs down, maybe thanks to some face-saving diplomatic formula, the Biden administration...
- 6From:All Things ConsideredTo listen to this broadcast, click here: BYLINE: TOM BOWMAN HOST: MARY LOUISE KELLY MARY LOUISE KELLY: China continues to spend vast amounts of money on its military. The country is building more ships and more...
- 7From:The New York TimesThe failed submarine deal with Australia raises questions about whether there is an unbridgeable divide between France's vision of itself on the world stage and its actual power. PARIS -- Beneath France's angry...
- 8From:The New York TimesThough often seen as vanity or pique, France's assertiveness abroad is calibrated to manage a quandary it has faced since World War II: how to act as an independent power while depending on allies. For France, this...
- 9From:The New York TimesIt may look like the bad old days of the Cold War, but today's bitter superpower competition is about technology, cyberconflict and influence operations. WASHINGTON -- Sixty days into his administration, President...
- 10From:The Washington PostByline: Ishaan Tharoor The United States had superpower status thrust upon it, the conventional view holds. Amid the collapse of European empires and the global threats of Nazism and Stalinism, America emerged as the...
- 11From:The Washington PostByline: Karoun Demirjian WASHINGTON - A new report from the House Intelligence Committee warns that if the United States does not significantly change its approach to China, it risks falling behind the rising...
- 12From:The Washington PostByline: Daniel W. Drezner Amid a year of catastrophe there are some reasons for optimism. There are tentative signs of good news in terms of the economy and the pandemic; there are more robust signs that there has been...
- 13From:Globe & Mail (Toronto, Canada)Byline: NATHAN VANDERKLIPPE, Staff BEIJING -- Lead Weeks of battles between China and Western countries have brought intemperate language, pointed metaphors, at least one quotation from Mao Zedong - and a clearer...
- 14From:Globe & Mail (Toronto, Canada)Byline: AUREL BRAUN Lead Professor of international relations and political science at the University of Toronto, and an associate at the Davis Center at Harvard University The posh resort town of Biarritz, on...
- 15From:The New York TimesWASHINGTON -- When President Trump meets President Xi Jinping of China this week to discuss contentious trade issues, they will face each other in another nation that was once the United States' main commercial rival,...
- 16From:The Washington PostByline: Timothy Frye From Venezuela to Syria to Ukraine, Moscow is playing an assertive role in global affairs. Observers often give Vladimir Putin the credit for bringing Russia "back" as a force to be reckoned with...
- 17From:New Zealand International Review (Vol. 44, Issue 3)Of late it has generally been assumed that by the middle of this century China will be the super-power. I question that. I am convinced that it will not be the super-power of the 21st century; I am not even sure it is...
- 18From:The Washington PostByline: Max Boot Great powers die more often by suicide than murder. Political paralysis and short-term thinking robs them of the ability to keep interests and commitments in balance, to innovate militarily and...
- 19From:All Things ConsideredTo listen to this broadcast, click here: HOST: AILSA CHANG AILSA CHANG: The 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month 100 years ago marked the end of World War One. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "LA MARSEILLAISE")...
- 20From:The Washington PostByline: Josh Rogin ASPEN, Colo. - The nation's top intelligence officials publicly declared last week that China is seeking to supplant the United States as the dominant world power and represents the number one...