Chapter 1 - "A Coherent Body of Thought and Action": Defining Grand
Strategy
Chapter 2 - "The Party Leads Everything": Grand Strategy and the
Communist Party
Chapter 3 - "New Cold Wars Have Begun": The Traumatic Trifecta and
the US Threat
Chapter 4 - "Hiding Capabilities and Biding Time": Blunting as
China's First Displacement Strategy
Chapter 5 - "A Change in the Balance of Power": The Financial
Crisis and US Decline
Chapter 6 - "Actively Accomplish Something": Building as China's
Second Strategy of Displacement
Chapter 7 - "A Suit that No Longer Fits": The Global Order and
China's Ambitions
Chapter 8 - "Towards the World's Center Stage": Global Expansion as
China's Third Displacement Strategy
Chapter 9 - "An Asymmetric Response": Dealing with Chinese
Strategies of Displacement
Rush Doshi is the founding director of the Brookings China Strategy
Initiative and a fellow (on leave) at Yale Law School's Paul Tsai
China Center. Previously, he was a member of the Asia policy
working groups for the Biden and Clinton presidential campaigns and
a Fulbright Fellow in China. His research has appeared in The New
York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Foreign
Affairs, and
International Organization, among other publications. Proficient in
Mandarin, Doshi received his PhD from Harvard University focusing
on Chinese foreign policy and his bachelor's from Princeton
University. He is currently serving as Director for China on
the
Biden Administration's National Security Council (NSC), but this
work was completed before his government service, is based entirely
on open sources, and does not necessarily reflect the views of the
US Government or NSC.
"The Long Game brings what's been largely missing from debate on
US-China relations: historically informed insight into the nature
of China's Leninist system and strategy." -Kevin Rudd, President of
the Asia Society and former Prime Minister of Australia
"The Long Game is essential in understanding China's approach to
the evolving US-China relationship and global order. Unique in
scope and unmatched in substance, Rush Doshi's masterfully
researched work describes clearly the economic, political, and
military contours of China's strategic approach. The observations,
analysis, and recommendations of this superb work must be
foundational to any China playbook-business, political, or
military."
-Admiral Gary Roughead, U.S. Navy (Retired)
"Using primary sources and crisp analysis, Rush Doshi decodes
Beijing's grand strategy of the last three decades. In the process,
he exposes the threadbare assumptions that caused countless
American policymakers, intelligence analysts, and scholars to
misjudge the intentions and capacities of China's rulers. Wishful
thinkers, isolationists, and accommodationists will marshal no
credible counterarguments to the central findings of this superb
book."
-Matt Pottinger, Former Deputy National Security Advisor
"'What does China want?' Rush Doshi makes such a cogent case, based
on a wealth of Chinese textual and behavioral evidence, that
China's consistent strategy has been to displace the United States
that he persuades me to re-examine my view that China's aims are
open-ended and malleable. His compelling book should become an
instant classic in the China field and required reading for
everyone trying to figure out America's own best strategy toward
China."
-Susan Shirk, Professor and Chair of the 21st Century China Center,
University of California-San Diego
"A must-read for anyone wrestling with the China Challenge. Doshi's
careful analysis of Chinese language documents make a powerful case
that China is pursuing a coherent grand strategy to overturn the
US-led international order." -Graham Allison, Professor of
Government, Harvard Kennedy School
"Doshi has brilliantly limned a new framework for understanding
both the global ambition and the strategic challenges posed by Xi
Jinping and his 'wolf warrior diplomacy.' If you're looking for the
one book that best illuminates the historical logic of his
unrepentant 'China Dream,' The Long Game is it." -Orville Schell,
Director, Center on US-China Policy, the Asia Society
"Based on a careful reading of a vast array of Chinese sources,
Rush Doshi presents a novel and compelling account of the evolution
of Beijing's grand strategy. Doshi argues persuasively that shifts
in China's behavior are driven by the Communist Party's collective
assessment of trends in the global balance of power rather than by
the personalities or preferences of individual leaders. The
implications are not reassuring: China's increasingly open and
aggressive attempts to displace the US and transform the
international system began before Xi Jinping took power and will
likely persist after he is gone. This important and insightful book
should be required
reading for scholars and policymakers alike." -Aaron L. Friedberg,
Professor or Politics and International Affairs, Princeton
University
"The debate over whether China has a strategy to displace American
leadership in Asia is over. Now comes the first authoritative
account of what that strategy is. Using a vast array of original
sources, Rush Doshi does unprecedented forensic work on the origins
of Chinese grand strategy and its prospects for success." -Michael
J. Green, author of By More than Providence: Grand Strategy and
American Power in the Asia-Pacific since 1783
"If you doubt that China has been pursuing a long-term,
comprehensive strategy to achieve global primacy, read Rush Doshi's
book. In this brilliant, definitive work, Doshi details the
vaulting ambition of Beijing's agenda. Everyone interested in the
future of American power and world order should read it now-or weep
later." -Hal Brands, Johns Hopkins University and American
Enterprise Institute
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