Opinion | The Sino-US power struggle is not China’s to win, but the West’s to lose
- US military adventurism and predatory capitalism are allowing Beijing to entice nations away, as China’s rise intersects with America’s decline
- To turn things around, the US and its allies need a radical shift in their foreign policy thinking
Unabashed adventurism and the lack of diplomacy have been the key stand-outs for Washington since the fall of the Soviet Union. After 30 years, the winner’s curse has certainly befallen the United States, which is now wedged between domestic instability and its geoeconomic and geopolitical competition with China.
Just as nature abhors a vacuum, so too does politics and power, and as the West creates these power vacuums, Beijing is being presented with the opportunity to fill them and increase its global influence.
Following the West’s withdrawal from Afghanistan, a mix of opportunism and genuine safety concerns have seen China, and its allies Russia and Iran, quick to embrace a Taliban government. While it’s still unclear what a post-war Afghanistan will look like, expect Beijing to feature heavily.