Sinica Podcast

"The China Debate We're Not Having" | Part 2: What Does the United States Want?

Apr 15, 2026
Leslie Vinjamuri, pollster and CEO highlighting changing U.S. attitudes toward China. Jonas Nahm, SAIS professor reframing economic competition into concrete buckets. Katherine Thompson, former Pentagon staffer assessing military trade-offs for Indo-Pacific deterrence. Matt Duss, progressive foreign policy commentator arguing the U.S. lacks a coherent China strategy. They debate public opinion shifts, strategic trade-offs, practical economic competition, and allied burdens.
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INSIGHT

U.S. Lacks A Coherent Grand Strategy

  • The United States currently lacks a coherent grand strategy because the old bipartisan consensus has collapsed since 2016.
  • Matt Duss argues Trumpism's persistence and a fragmented Democratic establishment leave U.S. policy searching for a new organizing purpose ahead of 2028 primaries.
INSIGHT

NDS Forces Hard Tradeoffs

  • The new National Defense Strategy forces honest tradeoffs by prioritizing theaters and resources rather than assuming unlimited capacity.
  • Katherine Thompson stresses deterrence in the Indo-Pacific requires reallocating munitions and procurement, which reduces capacity elsewhere like Europe or the Middle East.
ADVICE

Frame Economic Competition As Domestic Problem Solving

  • Reframe U.S.-China economic competition into narrow domestic problem sets rather than a monolithic rivalry.
  • Jonas Nahm suggests three buckets: affordability and energy (solar, batteries), tech catch-up (joint ventures), and manufacturing competitiveness (automation, robots).
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