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The Biden Administration’s Indo-Pacific Strategy and China-U.S. Strategic Competition

Wei Zongyou

China Quarterly of International Strategic Studies, Vol. 7, No. 2, 2022

Wei Zongyou, “The Biden Administration’s Indo-Pacific Strategy and China-U.S. Strategic Competition”, China Quarterly of International Strategic Studies, Vol. 7, No. 2, 157–178

Abstract: The Biden administration has yet to announce its Indo-Pacific strategy, but the overall framework seems all clear: it views China as the main challenger, if not a direct threat, to its political, economic, and military influence in the region, and vows to take diplomatic, economic, and military actions to counterbalance China’s growing influence, preferably with its allies and partners. The Biden administration has taken a series of steps to unite its Asian and even European allies and partners, offered economic alternatives to China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), revamped regional institutional architectures, and tried to shape the regional order to its advantage. As a result, China-U.S. relations have deteriorated further on Biden’s watch and is moving in the direction of confrontation.

Keywords: Biden administration; Indo-Pacific; strategic competition; regional order.

About the author: Wei Zongyou is a professor at the Center for American Studies, Fudan University. He can be reached at wzy82cn@163.com. Zhang Yunhan is an M.A. candidate at the School of International Relations and Public Affairs, Shanghai International Studies University, and can be reached at zhangyunhan0207@163.com. This paper was funded by “The National Social Science Foundation of China” (No. 20AGJ009).

Link: Wei Zongyou, “The Biden Administration’s Indo-Pacific Strategy and China-U.S. Strategic Competition”

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