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Matt Pottinger: The United States’ Strategic Competition With China

with Matt Pottingervia United States Senate Committee On Armed Services
Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Matt Pottinger testifies before the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee on “The United States’ strategic competition with China.”

Analysis and Commentary

What About Japan?

by John H. Cochranevia The Grumpy Economist
Sunday, June 6, 2021

What about Japan? It's a question I often hear from advocates of fiscal expansion. Japan has huge debts and no crisis or inflation (so far). Doesn't that prove the US can borrow a ton more money painlessly?

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Pacific Century: The Business Of China, Plus Wuhan Wooziness

interview with Dan Rosen, Michael R. Auslin, John Yoovia The Pacific Century
Thursday, June 3, 2021

Misha and John are joined by China investor Dan Rosen, of Rhodium Group.

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Fanning of the Flames Speaker Series: Anchors of History: The Long Shadow of Japanese Imperial Propaganda

via Hoover Podcasts
Tuesday, June 1, 2021

The Hoover Institution Library & Archives and Hoover Institution Press Present the Fanning the Flames Speaker Series in celebration of the publication Fanning the Flames: Propaganda in Modern Japan edited by Kay Ueda.

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Watch This Space: Beijing’s Push To Close Off Taiwan’s International Space And The U.S. Response

via Hoover Podcasts
Thursday, May 27, 2021

As the World Health Assembly convenes amidst the ongoing COVID-19 global pandemic, it does so again without Taiwan’s participation. That the WHA would exclude Taiwan—whose democracy has deployed perhaps the world’s most effective response to COVID-19—puts into sharp relief the costs for populations around the globe of China’s broader attempt to close off Taiwan’s international space.

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Toward A Democratic China: What Role Can Outsiders Play?

via Hoover Podcasts
Monday, May 24, 2021

Is there an appetite for democracy in China? Is the regime’s monopoly on political power invincible? Can and should outsiders help Chinese reformers achieve democracy? If so, how? Is regime change possible, anytime soon? Will it lead to democracy or chaos?

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Panel II: Responses: Security In The Age Of Liberal Democratic Erosion

via Fellow Talks
Friday, May 21, 2021

Security in the Age of Liberal Democratic Erosion will focus on the critical security challenges facing liberal democracies and examine the threats of external adversaries and how democracies can respond.

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Pacific Century: World To China: It’s Not Us, It’s You

interview with Michael R. Auslin, John Yoovia The Pacific Century
Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Misha and John talk about how the liberal world is beginning to turn against Beijing’s aggressive actions.

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Gates’s Way To National Security

interview with John H. Cochrane, Niall Ferguson, Robert Gates, H. R. McMaster, Bill Whalenvia GoodFellows: Conversations From The Hoover Institution
Wednesday, May 19, 2021

It’s a complicated world—one in which an ascendant China threatens American concerns, fighting has recommenced in the Middle East, and the US government may not be suitably prepared for future cyberattacks. Robert Gates, secretary of defense in both the Obama and Bush 43 presidential administrations, joins Hoover senior fellows Niall Ferguson, H. R. McMaster, and John Cochrane to discuss the state of world affairs, US cybersecurity, and America’s global vision (or lack thereof).

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World War III In Novels

by Bing Westvia Military History in the News
Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Like hurricanes and volcanoes, most wars are not predictable even months before the event. In this regard, national intelligence estimates are no more soothsaying than novels. But unlike estimates by bureaucrats, novels are stories about human nature that entertain and often enlighten or remind us about the complexity called human nature. Consider these five novels about World War III.

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