4.8 • 676 Ratings
🗓️ 21 November 2024
⏱️ 77 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
This week on Sinica, I chat with Michael Swaine, Senior Research Fellow at the Quincy Institute for the last couple of years, prior to which he spent nearly two decades as a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where he led extensive work on Chinese defense and foreign policy, U.S.-China relations, and East Asian international relations more broadly. He was also a senior policy analyst at the RAND Corporation, where he developed a reputation for rigorous research on Asian security and crisis management. We focus on his recent report, “Avoiding the Abyss: An Urgent Need for Sino-U.S. Crisis Management,” which offers both a framework for understanding the forces driving U.S.-China crises and a roadmap to prevent or manage these crises effectively. He drew on his many decades of experience working on the security dimension of the bilateral relationship, including his participation in many Track II dialogues and simulations of crisis scenarios over the years.
4:51 – Defining "crisis" and "crisis prevention"
10:13 – The possibility of a crisis in the South China Sea
12:31 – Lessons from past crises
20:08 – The problematic moralistic stances and tit-for-tat escalation produced by yǒulǐ, yǒulì, yǒu jié 有理, 有利, 有节
27:37 – U.S. concern over the credibility of its alliance commitments
34:50 – The problem of perception
38:16 – Examples of how each side is sometimes unable to see how its own actions are perceived by the other
41:20 – The dangers of failing to understand and making assumptions about the China’s historical memory
45:42 – Problems of signaling and how best to solve them
51:17 – Mike’s suggestions for a crisis toolkit and his proposal of a civilian-led two-tier dialogue structure
58:41 – Track II dialogues
1:02:47 – The importance of educating leaders up and down the system on crisis management
1:06:08 – The structural issues of the decision-making systems in China and the U.S.
Recommendations:
Michael: Art critic Brian Sewell’s The Reviews That Caused the Rumpus; Robert Suettinger’s The Conscience of the Party: Hu Yaobang, China’s Communist Reformer
Kaiser: The Great Transformation: China’s Road from Revolution to Reform by Odd Arne Westad and Chen Jian
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Cynical Podcast, the weekly discussion of current affairs in China. |
0:13.0 | In this program, we'll look at books, ideas, new research, intellectual currents, and cultural |
0:19.0 | trends that can help us better understand what's |
0:21.3 | happening in China's politics, foreign relations, economics, and society. |
0:26.2 | Join me each week for in-depth conversations that shed more light and bring less heat to |
0:32.1 | how we think and talk about China. |
0:34.9 | I'm Kaiser Guo coming to you from Chapel Hill, North Carolina. |
0:38.3 | Cynica is supported this year by the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, |
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1:01.8 | my work at www.cenapodcast.com. Become a subscriber and enjoy, in addition to the podcast, |
1:10.2 | the complete transcript of the show, |
1:12.3 | essays from me, as well as writings and podcasts from some of your favorite China-focused |
1:16.4 | columnists and commentators, with offerings like the China Global South podcast, James Carter's |
1:21.8 | This Week in China's History, The Ultimate China Bookshelf by Paul French, Andrew Methwin's |
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1:31.1 | So today we're tackling a topic that strikes me as increasingly urgent, |
1:35.7 | given Donald Trump's recent electoral victory. |
1:38.2 | We could well be in for a period of heightened tension between Washington and Beijing, |
1:43.1 | at the very least, we're in |
... |
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