
The Foreign Affairs Interview How the Past Shadows China’s Future
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Jan 1, 2026 Historian Odd Arne Westad dives deep into China's historical context and its implications for current U.S. foreign policy. He addresses the risks of drawing parallels between China and the Soviet Union, highlighting a shift toward multipolarity in a global economy. Westad draws connections to pre-World War I tensions, framing Taiwan as a potential flashpoint. He warns that China's ties with Russia may entangle it in future conflicts, and emphasizes the necessity of cautious U.S.-China relations to avert escalation.
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Multipolarity Makes This Different
- Westad argues the US–China relationship is not a Cold War replay because the world is moving toward multipolarity and deep economic integration.
- That integration makes containment far harder and the competition more complex than US–Soviet dynamics.
China’s Immediate Goal Is Regional Predominance
- Westad says China's explicit aim is regional predominance in East Asia and the Western Pacific rather than immediate global domination.
- Regional dominance would effectively translate into global influence because the region is central to future economic and technological power.
Xi Echoes Imperial Precedents
- Westad compares Xi's outlook to Qing emperors, stressing historical continuity and managing regional dominance amid rapid domestic change.
- He warns rising capability often complicates, not simplifies, relations with neighboring states guarding sovereignty.




