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The possibility of an arms race between the US and China is only increasing as a result of the squo



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China Relations Core - Berkeley 2016
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The possibility of an arms race between the US and China is only increasing as a result of the squo.


Peter Symonds, 5/31/16, “CHINA PREPARES TO SEND NUCLEAR SUBMARINES INTO PACIFIC OCEAN”, World Socialist Website, https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2016/05/31/chin-m31.html
An article last week in the British-based Guardian reported that the Chinese military “is poised to send submarines armed with nuclear missiles into the Pacific Ocean for the first time, arguing that new US weapons systems have so undermined Beijing’s existing deterrent force that it has been left with no alternative.” While the timing is uncertain, the move ups the ante in an intensifying nuclear arms race between the US and China that heightens the risk of war. Since coming to office, the Obama administration has engaged in a military build-up and strengthening of alliances throughout Asia in preparation for war with China. It has committed more than $1 trillion over 30 years to the upgrading and expansion of the US nuclear arsenal and delivery systems.

US engagement with China reduces the possibilities of conflict between the two countries.


Joshua Eisenman, assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin's Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs and senior fellow for China studies at the American Foreign Policy Council, 1/21/16, “RETHINKING U.S. STRATEGY TOWARDS CHINA”, Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, http://www.carnegiecouncil.org/publications/articles_papers_reports/756
How can the U.S. improve its policy towards China to avoid, and yet be prepared for, conflict? Since the Nixon Administration, the U.S. strategy towards China has been predicated on the assumption that if the bilateral relationship is properly managed conflict can be avoided. Many contend that through engagement the U.S. can shape China's choices in ways that reduce the chances the U.S. and China will come into conflict. Whether a conflict occurs, the argument goes, depends on whether China is dissatisfied with the prevailing international order, because as James Steinberg and Michael O'Hanlon have written: "only if it believes that it is disadvantaged will China necessarily choose to use its newfound power to create a world more to its own liking in potentially disruptive ways.” Jeffery Bader, who served as a top White House official in the first Obama administration, agrees that “China could play a more constructive role than it would by sitting outside of that system.” So the prevailing wisdom holds and the thinking behind engagement goes, if China participates extensively in the international system, then it will help create a system it likes and not become revisionist.


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