China
Against the backdrop of a shifting international order and the resurgence of strategic competition among powerful states, USIP’s work on China has two primary objectives: averting crisis or conflict between the United States and China and mitigating the potential for violence in countries and regions where China is extending its influence.
Learn more in USIP’s fact sheet on The Current Situation in China.
Featured Publications
![US-China Rivalry in Asia and Africa: Lessons from the Cold War](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2024-06/sr-530_us-china-rivalry-asia-africa-lessons-from-cold-war_featured.jpg?itok=gurQq44P)
US-China Rivalry in Asia and Africa: Lessons from the Cold War
One of the hallmarks of the Cold War era was a competition between the United States and its democratic allies, on the one hand, and Communist powers, on the other, for the allegiance of countries in Africa and Asia. In an echo of the Cold War, a similar competition between the United States and China is playing out today. This report examines the US-China rivalry then and now and offers insights and lessons that can guide US policymakers as they navigate the contemporary competition.
![In Pyongyang, Putin and Kim Tighten Ties, Pledge Mutual Defense](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2024-06/20240620_russia-nkorea-4_nyt_ac.jpg?itok=V2ccBBOD)
In Pyongyang, Putin and Kim Tighten Ties, Pledge Mutual Defense
As President Vladimir Putin’s illegal war on Ukraine grinds on, the Russian leader needs friends and supporters wherever he can get them. To that end, Putin traveled this week to North Korea for the first time in nearly 25 years, looking to deepen cooperation with the rogue regime and, chiefly, to get more ammunition for his war on Ukraine. Putin and Kim Jong Un inked what the North Korean leader called “the most powerful treaty” ever between the two countries. While strengthened ties between two of Washington’s most enduring adversaries are of unquestioned concern for the U.S., Beijing is also wary of the implications.
![From Dams to Data: China’s Shifting Interests in Central America](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2024-06/20240618_china-mexico-invest-13_nyt_ac.jpg?itok=zXpr7CHu)
From Dams to Data: China’s Shifting Interests in Central America
China continues to face economic headwinds, marked by reports this week of a protracted property slump. To address its mounting economic and financial challenges, Beijing is implementing a new industr
Current Projects
![Tracking China’s Global Security Initiative](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2024-03/20240307-biden-xi-2-nyt-project.jpg?itok=BiU283oq)
Tracking China’s Global Security Initiative
China’s ongoing push to change the international security order entered a new phase with the launch of the Global Security Initiative (GSI) in April 2022. The GSI promotes a set of distinct security concepts and principles — many of which reflect Beijing’s longstanding international normative preferences, such an emphasis on territorial sovereignty and noninterference. USIP is tracking how the GSI is being operationalized by China, with an initial focus on essay series examining China’s GSI activities in ASEAN and Central Asia.
![NATO and Indo-Pacific Partners: Understanding Views and Interests](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-12/natoap4-2022-madrid-summit-wiki-project.jpg?itok=ed6TcHti)
NATO and Indo-Pacific Partners: Understanding Views and Interests
To increase understanding of these changes and their impacts, USIP convened an expert study group consisting of experts from NATO countries and from NATO’s formal partner countries in the Indo-Pacific: Australia, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand, which are informally known as the Indo-Pacific Four (or IP4).
![Southeast Asia in a World of Strategic Competition: An Essay Series](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2023-09/20230926-asean_flags-wikicommons-project.jpg?itok=D6Yt_zNM)
Southeast Asia in a World of Strategic Competition: An Essay Series
Great power rivalry between the United States and China is frequently described in bilateral terms, with regions of the world — including Southeast Asia — merely serving as arenas of competition. But this framing ignores the agency of third countries in managing the risks and opportunities presented by this competition. To explore these countries’ agency and the corresponding policy options, this USIP essays series includes contributions from 10 Southeast Asia-based experts. Each essay provides one country’s perspective on how the members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) perceive and respond to strategic competition between the United States and China.