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Lost decade : the US pivot to Asia and the rise of Chinese power / Robert D. Blackwill and Richard Fontaine.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publisher: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2024]Description: 469 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780197677940
Other title:
  • US pivot to Asia and the rise of Chinese power
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Lost decadeDDC classification:
  • 327.7305 23/eng/20240208
LOC classification:
  • DS 33.4 B632l 2024
Contents:
What's at Stake : The Pivot and American Vital National Interests -- The Pivots Before the Pivot : The Clinton and Bush Administrations -- Rhetoric Meets Reality : Obama's Pivot to Asia -- Turning on China : The Pivot During the Trump Administration -- Gaining Ground : Biden Policy Toward Asia and China -- Please Stay : Europe and the Pivot -- America Is Going Home : The Middle East and the Pivot -- We Don't Want to Choose : The Indo-Pacific and the Pivot -- We Will Build in Any Case : China Rises as the Pivot Stalls -- Balancing Military Power in Asia : Defense Policy and the Pivot -- Pivoting from Offense to Defense : The Changing Role of Economic Policy -- Competition and Cooperation : Transnational Issues and the Pivot -- The US Pivot to Asia and American Grand Strategy.
Summary: "The "Pivot to Asia" was first announced by the Obama administration in 2011 with the aim to redirect America's strategic focus to the Indo-Pacific. Not all went according to plan. This book tells the story of Washington's attempted reorientation and the simultaneous rise of Chinese power and assertiveness. It examines the impulse behind the Pivot, analyzes the challenges the policy posed for America's global presence and commitments, and investigates where and how it faltered. It assesses responses to the Pivot and strategic trendlines across countries in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, and details China's aggressive actions throughout the 2010s. More than ten years after its announcement, a careful examination of the evidence indicates that the United States did not, in fact, pivot to Asia. This "lost decade" coincided with a massive expansion of Chinese power and assertiveness, a deepening of America's domestic divisions, and rising doubts in the world about US intentions, staying power, and competence. If the 1965 escalation in Vietnam and the 2003 invasion of Iraq represent America's greatest post-World War II failures of commission, Washington's collective failure to respond adequately to growing Chinese power across the 2010s stands as perhaps the most consequential US policy omission since 1945. The text draws on lessons from the policy's faulty implementation to propose a renewed US pivot to Asia"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Libro Libro Biblioteca Juan Bosch Biblioteca Juan Bosch Automatización y Procesos Técnicos Automatización y Procesos Técnicos (1er. Piso) DS33.4.U6 .B53 2024 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00000192002

"A Council on Foreign Relations Book."

Includes bibliographical references (pages 293-461) and index.

What's at Stake : The Pivot and American Vital National Interests -- The Pivots Before the Pivot : The Clinton and Bush Administrations -- Rhetoric Meets Reality : Obama's Pivot to Asia -- Turning on China : The Pivot During the Trump Administration -- Gaining Ground : Biden Policy Toward Asia and China -- Please Stay : Europe and the Pivot -- America Is Going Home : The Middle East and the Pivot -- We Don't Want to Choose : The Indo-Pacific and the Pivot -- We Will Build in Any Case : China Rises as the Pivot Stalls -- Balancing Military Power in Asia : Defense Policy and the Pivot -- Pivoting from Offense to Defense : The Changing Role of Economic Policy -- Competition and Cooperation : Transnational Issues and the Pivot -- The US Pivot to Asia and American Grand Strategy.

"The "Pivot to Asia" was first announced by the Obama administration in 2011 with the aim to redirect America's strategic focus to the Indo-Pacific. Not all went according to plan. This book tells the story of Washington's attempted reorientation and the simultaneous rise of Chinese power and assertiveness. It examines the impulse behind the Pivot, analyzes the challenges the policy posed for America's global presence and commitments, and investigates where and how it faltered. It assesses responses to the Pivot and strategic trendlines across countries in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, and details China's aggressive actions throughout the 2010s. More than ten years after its announcement, a careful examination of the evidence indicates that the United States did not, in fact, pivot to Asia. This "lost decade" coincided with a massive expansion of Chinese power and assertiveness, a deepening of America's domestic divisions, and rising doubts in the world about US intentions, staying power, and competence. If the 1965 escalation in Vietnam and the 2003 invasion of Iraq represent America's greatest post-World War II failures of commission, Washington's collective failure to respond adequately to growing Chinese power across the 2010s stands as perhaps the most consequential US policy omission since 1945. The text draws on lessons from the policy's faulty implementation to propose a renewed US pivot to Asia"-- Provided by publisher.

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