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World on the Brink
How America Can Beat China in the Race for the Twenty-First Century
In World on the Brink, security expert Dmitri Alperovitch makes the case that we are already in the midst of Cold War II, with China, and that Taiwan is the perilous strategic flashpoint of this new conflict that risks triggering a devastating war between major nuclear powers in a similar role that West Berlin nearly played during Cold War I.
Laying out the comprehensive strategy to deter war and maintain U.S. place as the world's leading superpower in the face of rising China, Alperovitch breaks down not only the significant weaknesses that can prevent China from surpassing the United States, but also the key policies that will enable America to maintain primacy even as China ramps up its efforts.
As Alperovitch explains, we must play to our strengths and address our weaknesses, using our leverage as the strongest nation on the planet to tactfully navigate the next Cold War. This sharp, timely book is the essential blueprint for doing just that.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
April 30, 2024 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781668638101
- File size: 413667 KB
- Duration: 14:21:48
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
March 1, 2024
A thorough investigation of "America's top foreign policy challenge." One of the most significant geopolitical trends is the explosive growth of China. With assistance from Graff, Alperovitch, entrepreneur, cybersecurity expert, and founding member of the U.S. government's Cyber Safety Review Board, warns that America is now engaged in "Cold War II" with a nation far more populous and efficient than the former Soviet Union --and just as skilled at bending the rules. The author begins with a fictional scenario describing China's conquest of Taiwan in 2028. Most readers know that this is a long-standing Chinese obsession, but Alperovitch emphasizes that it would be a massive geopolitical triumph, assuring domination of the South China Sea and access to one of the world's most valuable resources: computer chips. "Taiwan alone is responsible for nearly 40 percent of new computing power manufactured every year worldwide," writes the author, adding that the Chinese are as productive, hardworking, and imaginative as Americans--and there are four times as many of them. Beijing's goal of becoming the world's top superpower seems inevitable unless U.S. officials act decisively. "To succeed over the next half century," writes Alperovitch, the U.S. "needs to prioritize two broad enablers of innovation--semiconductor chips and immigration." Regarding the latter, the author echoes other observers in his demonstration of how the U.S. discourages even skilled legal immigrants, a significant problem. Giving computer chips so much emphasis seems a stretch, but the author makes a convincing case that they are today's primary engines of progress. Eschewing the usual homilies about freedom, the author urges America to pay more attention to traditional allies as well as China's neighbors. "Other countries do not need to love us...and most of them...never will," he writes. "But as long as they hate China more, they may prefer to partner with us." Deeply insightful advice for the coming decades.COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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