[Brookings] Addressing U.S.-China Strategic Distrust (March 30, 2012) | CHINA US Focus
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[Brookings] Addressing U.S.-China Strategic Distrust (March 30, 2012)

Kenneth G. Lieberthal and Wang Jisi
March 30, 2012
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Although both Beijing and Washington consider the U.S.-China relationship to be the most important in the world, distrust of each other’s long term intentions ("strategic distrust") has grown to a dangerous degree.

The coauthors of this path-breaking study—one of America's leading China specialists and one of China's leading America specialists—lay out both the underlying concerns each leadership harbors about the other side and the reasons for those concerns. Each coauthor has written the narrative of his government’s views without any changes made by the other coauthor. Their purpose is to enable both leaderships to better fathom how the other thinks. The coauthors have together written the follow-on analysis and recommendations designed to improve the potential for a long-term normal major power U.S.-China relationship, rather than the adversarial relationship that might otherwise develop.

Download the Full Report [PDF]

The Brookings Institution is a nonprofit public policy organization based in Washington, DC.

 

 

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