China and America: Destined for Conflict?
Intro -- Preface to the English Edition -- The International Order in the Twenty-First Century Would Not be Bipolar But Multipolar -- The Trend of Power Decentralization is the Key Factor Contributing to the Formation of a Multipolar World in the Twenty-First Century -- The Reality of the International Order is Closer to a Multipolar Rather than Bipolar World -- Multilateralism Leads to a Multipolar Not a Bipolar World -- China and the United States are Not in a New Cold War -- China and the United States are Highly Interdependent While the United States and the Soviet Union were Not -- China-US Ideological Difference is Different from US-Soviet Ideological Struggle During the Cold War -- There Exists No Competition Between Different Blocs in the Current World -- Introduction -- Contents -- About the Author -- 1 Proposal of China-US New Model of Major-Country Relations -- 1.1 Changing Dynamics of China-US Relations -- 1.2 Obama's Strategic Adjustments on U.S. Policy Toward China -- 1.3 Conceptualization of a New Model of Major-Country Relations -- 2 Feasibility of a New Model of Major-Country Relations -- 2.1 Characteristics of the Twenty-First Century -- 2.1.1 Peace and Development Remain the Main Themes of the Twenty-First Century -- 2.1.2 Economic Globalization and the Increasing Interdependence Are Another Two Features of the Twenty-First Century -- 2.1.3 The Threats of Non-traditional Security Issues Become More Prominent in the Twenty-First Century -- 2.2 The Chinese Perspective -- 2.2.1 China's Modernization Drive Necessitates Maintaining a Long-Term Stable Relationship with the United States -- 2.2.2 China Issued the Guideline of Peaceful Development -- 2.2.3 China Does not Export Its Own Ideology -- 2.2.4 China Does not Challenge American Hegemony.