Beyond bipolar: why China-US rivalry defies the Cold War model
Chinese scholar Wang Jisi warns that current world order with ‘two superpowers and many strong powers’ faces growing risk of conflict

In a wide-ranging virtual conversation last Friday at the University of Hong Kong’s Centre on Contemporary China and the World (CCCW), Wang voiced concerns about America’s inward turn under US President Donald Trump, its pursuit of containment in both geopolitical and geoeconomic terms, and mounting cross-strait tensions.
“I do think the United States has an attitude towards China, but it also has strategies towards China,” Wang told CCCW director Cheng Li. “But it is difficult to define the strategy, especially the current strategy of the Trump administration.”
One of the most striking elements of the NSS, according to Wang, is its declaration of the western hemisphere as Washington’s top strategic priority – above Asia, Europe or the Middle East – in an unusual shift that reflects a country increasingly consumed by internal challenges.
Wang said that despite its relatively mild rhetoric towards China, the NSS had broadened the scope of national security beyond military threats to include economic, technological and homeland vulnerabilities.