11 research outputs found
Asia's Strategic Challenge: Manoeuvring between the US and China
This paper by Singapore's Ambassador-at-large Bilahari Kausikan was the inaugural Shedden Lecture in Strategy and Defence. It artfully describes the tension regional countries face and advocates a posture of flexibility and independence. It argues we should not try to shoehorn current complexity into a binary repeat of the Cold War and to be forced to choose between the great powers will be to have failed strategically
The big ideas of Lee Kuan Yew
Exposición del embajador Bilahari Kausikan en la conferencia "The big ideas of Lee Kuan Yew", realizada en la Universidad Nacional de Singapur el 16 de septiembre de 2013
Navigating great power competition in the 21st century: beyond the cold war paradigm
Russian aggression against Ukraine and US-China strategic competition have made the world more uncertain and dangerous. But as we grapple with the complexities of Ukraine and the US-China rivalry, it is crucial not to lose the psychological poise needed to put them in proper perspective.Published versio
Asia’s strategic challenge: manoeuvring between the US and China
This paper outlines the dilemmas faced by Asian countries caught in strategic competition between great powers.
Abstract
This paper by Singapore’s Ambassador-at-large Bilahari Kausikan was the inaugural Shedden Lecture in Strategy and Defence. It artfully describes the tension regional countries face and advocates a posture of flexibility and independence. It argues we should not try to shoehorn current complexity into a binary repeat of the Cold War and to be forced to choose between the great powers will be to have failed strategically.
Executive summary
The clarity of the Cold War is forever gone and it is analytically misleading to try and re-create it today.
For non-great power countries the essence of post-Cold War strategy is to embrace ambiguity. To be forced to choose is to have failed.
US China competition provides a space for manoeuvre for non-great powers that conflict or agreement between the major powers does not.
To be most successful, multilateral institutions should not work too well in constraining the major powers, or the institution will be sidelined.
Preservation of communist party rule is the core interest of China’s leaders. Public US acknowledgement of this is central to strategic trust emerging