Analysis & Opinions - The New York Times
Can the Democrats Avoid Trump's China Trap?
The president wants a new cold war to deflect attention from his failures.
Before the pandemic, before the Great Recession, before proliferating hurricanes and fires, the United States began a global war on terrorism. Its leaders fixated on a shadowy enemy abroad as life at home crumbled for millions of Americans. The war on terrorism did not end terrorism; the war itself became endless. What it did shatter was the myth that a triumphant United States could bend the world to its will.
But the myth may be roaring back, albeit in a less righteous, more vicious guise. Though the new enemy is a virus, even less susceptible to verbal and physical firepower than terrorists, the Trump administration appears to be setting its target on a foreign power: China, where the outbreak appears to have started but which is hardly responsible for the United States being the most infected country in the world.
As the pandemic spread in the United States in March, President Trump began to castigate Beijing for failing to contain and report on "the Chinese virus." Now Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is declaring that there is "a significant amount of evidence" that the virus originated in a Chinese laboratory, though he has provided no proof....
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For Academic Citation:
Odell, Rachel Esplin and Stephen Wertheim.“Can the Democrats Avoid Trump's China Trap?.” The New York Times, May 10, 2020.
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Before the pandemic, before the Great Recession, before proliferating hurricanes and fires, the United States began a global war on terrorism. Its leaders fixated on a shadowy enemy abroad as life at home crumbled for millions of Americans. The war on terrorism did not end terrorism; the war itself became endless. What it did shatter was the myth that a triumphant United States could bend the world to its will.
But the myth may be roaring back, albeit in a less righteous, more vicious guise. Though the new enemy is a virus, even less susceptible to verbal and physical firepower than terrorists, the Trump administration appears to be setting its target on a foreign power: China, where the outbreak appears to have started but which is hardly responsible for the United States being the most infected country in the world.
As the pandemic spread in the United States in March, President Trump began to castigate Beijing for failing to contain and report on "the Chinese virus." Now Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is declaring that there is "a significant amount of evidence" that the virus originated in a Chinese laboratory, though he has provided no proof....
Want to Read More?
The full text of this publication is available via The New York Times.- Recommended
- In the Spotlight
- Most Viewed
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Analysis & Opinions - Project Syndicate
An Abysmal Failure of Leadership
Analysis & Opinions - Foreign Policy
The United States Forgot Its Strategy for Winning Cold Wars
Analysis & Opinions - Deseret News
Romney's Reckless China Rhetoric Risks New Cold War
In the Spotlight
Most Viewed
Policy Brief - Quarterly Journal: International Security
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