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UTILIZE CHINESE CAPACITY

All podcast episode summaries matching UTILIZE CHINESE CAPACITY β€” aggregated across every podcast we track.

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Quotes & Clips tagged UTILIZE CHINESE CAPACITY

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The old foreign policy consensus has completely shattered

β€œThere was a statement that we were going to be disinvesting in this region and reinvesting more in this region. But essentially, there was very little in terms of specifics about where and how we were actually going to disinvest in order to focus on the regions that really matter to us.”

β€” Matt Duss

Foreign policy is increasingly treated as culture war

β€œPart of the challenge has been that Americans have become so, I think, understandably cynical about the ability of government and politics to produce real change that they see it now just as an area for culture war. That has been a problem specifically in foreign policy as well.”

β€” Matt Duss

U.S. allies remain deeply confused by Washington’s expectations

β€œNobody is more confused than America's allies about what the United States wants. And this is especially the case when it comes to China. I've sat in a lot of meetings recently where Europeans have said, what does the United States expect of us in our relationship with China?”

β€” Leslie Vinjamuri

U.S. defense strategy requires making painful regional trade-offs

β€œIf we prioritize the Indo-Pacific and deterrence in the Indo-Pacific, even if we're going to come at it as the NDS uses the language of not wanting to humiliate China, not wanting to dominate China, but instead back up our position and our interests in the regions with a credible deterrence, that's going to take a hefty amount of resourcing and that's going to mean that we're going to need our allies and other theaters in particular to take on more of the burden.”

β€” Katherine Thompson

Chinese capacity could help solve specific American problems

β€œChina has excess capacity in solar panels and also makes pretty good batteries that are fairly cheap. Maybe we can think about creatively what China could bring to the table in terms of solving some of those issues and what the governance strategies would be for extracting some kind of learning out of that investment if it were to come.”

β€” Jonas Nahm

Deterrence by denial is the central military objective

β€œOne of those core national interests is re-establishing deterrence by denial on the first island chain in the Indo-Pacific, in order for us to have, you know, basically hopefully a credible conversation with China that's backed up by the appropriate, you know, use of force if we need to use it, you know, to basically make the Taiwan scenario for the Chinese so unpalatable that they won't want to go.”

β€” Katherine Thompson

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