This book offers a timely and compelling explanation for the deterioration of U.S.-China security relations during the Obama Presidency. The U.S.-China relationship has become one of (if not the most) vital features of contemporary world politics, and with arrival the Donald Trump to the White House in 2017, this vital geopolitical relationship sits at a precarious and dangerous crossroads. This book assesses a wide array of sources to systematically unpack the policy rhythms, drivers, and dynamics that defined the course of Sino-American security relations during the Obama-era. It fills several gaps in the literature on international security and conflict and offers a nuanced and innovative comparative approach to examine individual military domains. The case study chapters draw on recent Chinese and English sources – on military doctrine, capabilities, and defense strategy – to build a clear understanding the main sources of U.S.-China misperceptions, and highlight the problems theseassessments can create for the conduct of statecraft across strategically competitive geopolitical dyads. The book builds a sobering picture of U.S.-China relations that will appeal to specialists and generalists alike with an interest in future warfare, emerging military-technologies, military studies, arms control, and foreign policy issues in the Asia-Pacific region more broadly.
Cuprins
1.Introduction: Obama’s ‘Pivot’ to Asia and Air-Sea Battle.- 2.Conceptualizing the U.S.-China Security Dilemma.- 3.Washington’s Perceptions and Misperceptions of China’s Anti-access Area-denial ‘Strategy’.- 4.China’s Vision of the Future Networked Battlefield: Emerging Military-Technological Challenges to the United States.- 5.‘Guam Express’ and ‘Carrier Killers’: China’s Asymmetric Missile Threat to the United States in the Pacific.- 6.Chinese Evolving Approaches to Nuclear ‘War-fighting’: An Emerging Security Dilemma?.- 7.Concluding remarks.
Despre autor
Dr. James Johnson is Postdoctoral Visiting Honorary Fellow with the School of History & International Relations at the University of Leicester. James holds a Ph.D. in Politics & International Relations and a master’s degree in Asia-Pacific studies. He has published research and lectured in the following areas: security and strategic studies; US-China relations; ‘rising powers’; weapons non-proliferation and arms-control; emerging military-technologies; Chinese military doctrine; and East-Asia security more broadly defined. James’ latest research projects look at ‘new’ security challenges posed by technological developments in cyberspace and related technologies – artificial intelligence, robotics, autonomous systems and quantum communications. James is fluent in Mandarin.