4.8 β’ 676 Ratings
ποΈ 26 September 2024
β±οΈ 53 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
π§ΎοΈ Download transcript
This week on Sinica, I chat with Jessica Chen Weiss, until recently at Cornell University but now the David M. Lampton Professor of China Studies at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, SAIS, in Washington D.C. Jessica, to those of you familiar with her work, has been at the forefront of the fight for a less strident, diplomacy-first approach to China, balancing threats with assurances to find a modus vivendi with China. She has challenged prevailing notions about China's intentions, and has called for the U.S. to advance an affirmative vision of how it wants to live in the world with China. We focus in this conversation about a recent piece in Foreign Affairs in which she challenges both the solidity and the logic of the "bipartisan consensus" on China, and holds out hope that a next administration might approach the relationship differently.
3:45 β How Jessica has settled into D.C.; her professorial namesake; and how she has become a leading voice for a less confrontational approach to China
9:30 β Where Jessica sees diverging views on China in the Republican and Democratic Parties
12:41 β What a more durable basis for coexistence should look like
14:46 β Credible deterrence and strategic ambiguity in the context of Taiwan
16:03 β Acknowledgements to limits on American power and the importance of being realistic
18:09 β Assurances on Taiwan and what threatens their credibility
21:13 β The question of engagement and the deterrent effect of economic integration
25:30 β How the U.S. can combat legitimate national security threats from China without undermining its own values, and the importance of not treating the Chinese in diaspora as a fifth column
31:31 β Electoral politics: the importance of welcoming and inclusive policies and creating space for debate and discernment
35:07 β The importance of testing our assumptions
38:30 β What another Trump presidency might look like
40:30 β How a Harris administration might differ from the Biden administration
44:13 β The U.S. and China-Russia relations
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Cynica podcast, weekly discussion of current affairs in China. |
0:13.3 | In this program, we'll look at books, ideas, new research, intellectual currents, and cultural trends |
0:19.1 | that can help us better understand what's happening in China's politics, foreign relations, economics, and society. |
0:25.8 | Join me each week for in-depth conversations that shed more light and bring less heat to how we think and talk about China. |
0:34.0 | I'm Kaiser Guo coming to you from Chapel Hill, North Carolina. |
0:37.6 | Cynica is supported this year by the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, |
0:42.7 | a National Resource Center for the Study of East Asia. |
0:46.2 | The Cynica podcast will remain free, but if you work for an organization that believes in what I'm doing with the podcast, |
0:52.3 | please consider lending your support. |
0:54.6 | You can get me at Cynicapod at gmail.com. |
0:58.2 | And listeners, please support my work at www.cinnacapodcast.com. |
1:03.8 | Become a subscriber and enjoy, in addition to the podcast, the complete transcript of the show, |
1:08.9 | a weekly essay from me, not always weekly, but |
1:11.3 | you know, weekly-ish essay from me, and writings and podcasts from some of your favorite |
1:16.0 | China-focused columnists and commentators like James Carter, Paul French, Andrew Methven, |
1:21.6 | and of course Eric Olander and Kobus von Staten at the China Global South Project. |
1:27.0 | With just weeks now before the U.S. election, I imagine that listeners all over the world |
1:31.2 | have given quite a bit of thought to just how the results of the election will affect |
1:36.1 | U.S.-China relations. |
1:37.8 | This will, after all, have global consequences. |
1:40.7 | Earlier this week, Foreign Affairs published an article that really caught my attention for its direct relevance to this question, titled, The Case Against the China Consensus, Why the Next American President Must Steer Toward a Better Future. |
1:54.8 | The essay's author is Jessica Chen Wyss, a name doubtless familiar to everyone who listens to Cynica. |
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