Are we in a #NewColdWar?

I took George Kennan's Mr X article in @ForeignAffairs from 1947 (The Sources of Soviet Conduct) and replaced Soviet with Chinese, Lenin with Mao, Kremlin with Zhongnanhai, capitalist with democratic, etc.

The results (excerpted below) are 😲:
"{N]o opposition to them can be officially recognized as having any merit or justification whatsoever. Such opposition can flow, in theory, only from the hostile and incorrigible forces of dying democracy." Image
"When there is something the Chinese want from us, one or the other of these features of their policy may be thrust temporarily into the background...there will always be Americans who will leap forward with gleeful announcements that 'the Chinese have changed.'" Image
"[I]f truth were to be found elsewhere, there would be justification for its expression in organized activity. But it is precisely that which Chinese Communist Party cannot and will not permit. The leadership of the Communist Party is therefore always right" Image
"[T]he patient persistence by which it is animated means that it can be effectively countered not by sporadic acts which represent the momentary whims of democratic opinion but only by intelligent long-range policies on the part of China’s adversaries." Image
"The Chinese thesis not only implies complete lack of control by the west over its own economic destiny, it likewise assumes Chinese unity, discipline and patience over an infinite period." Image
"[T]he possibility remains...that Chinese power, like the democratic world of its conception, bears within it the seeds of its own decay." Image
"Balanced against this are the facts that China, as opposed to the western world in general, is still by far the weaker party, that Chinese policy is highly flexible, and that Chinese society may well contain deficiencies which will eventually weaken its own total potential." Image
"At each evidence of these tendencies, a new jauntiness can be noted in Beijing’s tread; new groups of foreign supporters climb on to what they can only view as the band wagon of international politics; and Chinese pressure increases all along the line in international affairs." Image
I realise I'm not the first to have made this explicit comparison. @AaronFriedberg, among others, got there first: tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.108…
Here's another (thanks to those who alerted me to it - you know who you are): worldaffairsjournal.org/article/new-co…
By the way (and in response to @ryanl_hass), it is fair to detail in which areas the substitution did *not* work:
1. Descriptions of the Soviet economy in 1947 bear no resemblance to China's today.
2. Framing Soviet Communism as a global ideological movement.

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More from @d_jaishankar

Nov 22, 2023
.@samirsaran & I visited Mexico City 🇲🇽 this week, where we were fortunate to meet with senior diplomats and politicians, Mexican business leaders, university deans, and civil society.

I thought I’d share 5 curious India-Mexico connections that you probably didn’t know. 🇮🇳 🇲🇽 Image
1. The Bengali revolutionary MN Roy, somewhat remarkably, founded communist parties in both Mexico and India.

Today, there’s an underground club named after him in the trendy Roma neighbourhood.
Image
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2. There’s a statue commemorating Gandhiji in Chapultepec Park in central Mexico City.

Gandhi-ji is also the inspiration behind a popular chain of bookstores in Mexico.
Image
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Read 6 tweets
Nov 16, 2023
THREAD: I took part in a fascinating discussion today on I2U2 and IMEC, with (non-official) participants from India, the U.S., Israel, and UAE. Timely given the turbulence in the Middle East.

It was not-for-attribution, so I'll just share a few of my observations: Image
1. The strategic backdrop in a post-Arab Spring region is:

a. a resurgence of nationalism over pan-Arabism or pan-Islamism

b. concerns in the Gulf about expanding Iranian influence (e.g. in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen).
2. There's also been a regional turn to a 'new non-alignment': a willingness to explore economic and strategic options with other powers (China, Russia, India, France, etc.) while trying to maintain ties - especially defense ties - with the United States. Easier said than done.
Read 5 tweets
May 12, 2023
“I am become Death, destroyer of worlds.” A short thread on Robert Oppenheimer, the Bhagavad Gita, and the poetry of the nuclear age. ImageImageImage
J. Robert Oppenheimer, often characterized as the father of the American nuclear bomb, is the subject of a much-anticipated Christopher Nolan biopic being released this summer.

Here’s the trailer:
In his younger days, Oppenheimer was introduced to Sanskrit by Arthur W. Ryder, professor at Berkeley, and began to take weekly tutorials.

He became fascinated by the Bhagavad Gita in particular, calling it “the most beautiful philosophical song existing in any known tongue.” Image
Read 19 tweets
Mar 23, 2023
THREAD: Over the past few weeks, I’ve attended a half dozen conferences – mostly in India – during which I met with military, business, and policy leaders from at least 50 countries. Some impressions on:
1.The Russia-Ukraine War
2.Views of the Indian economy
3.The Global South
(For those interested, I did a similar conference roundup thread last summer:)
1. RUSSIA/UKRAINE: The general expectation remains that the war will be a drawn out affair, and this year will be particularly violent. Nuclear concerns have subsided somewhat, as has intra-NATO quibbling over supplying military equipment to Ukraine.
Read 16 tweets
Jan 16, 2023
THREAD: I’ve spent the last week focused on India-U.S. 🇮🇳🇺🇸 relations, in numerous conversations with people in both countries' governments, business communities, strategic commentariat, private foundations, and media.

I thought I would share 12 general impressions:
1. India-U.S. official dialogue on matters to India’s east is really advanced. Virtually nothing is off the table and there is a high degree of trust. There are long-term concerns about the maritime domain in particular, which will assume different forms in the coming decades.
2. India-U.S. coordination is taking different forms. The Quad is most definitely not NATO (and shouldn’t be conflated with it) but is vital for coordination. You’ll hear a lot more acronyms beginning with ‘I’ bandied about: ICET, IPEF, IPMDA, I2U2, IPOI, etc.
Read 14 tweets
Dec 13, 2022
1. Year in Review: With 2022 drawing to a close, I thought I would share some of my articles and commentary on international affairs from the past year. It has been an eventful 12 months.
2. First, the Russian invasion of Ukraine had implications for Europe, China-Russia relations, and energy, food, and arms markets. In February, I suggested that the crisis exposed weaknesses in Russian and European approaches to international affairs. orfamerica.org/newresearch/wh…
3. After the invasion, it was clear that Russia's actions would have adverse effects over the long-term for its military partnership with India. A consequence would be India's further diversification and indigenisation. lowyinstitute.org/the-interprete…
Read 13 tweets

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