03-حزيران-2025
A new Cold War Driven by Economy and Technology
The issue is no longer a commercial dispute or an
economic competition between two major powers; it has become too evident to
obscure or downplay. The rivalry between the United States and China has
entered a new phase—one that increasingly resembles a strategic contest over
the future leadership of the global order in the coming decades. Both parties
are fully aware of their objectives and possess a clear understanding of one
another. In Washington, no one believes that Beijing’s rapid ascent is either coincidental
or a natural progression. Instead, it is perceived as a deliberate reenactment
of an earlier American model—when Washington reorganized its domestic
landscape, emerged to assert a global order aligned with its own interests.
Today, the U.S. is actively working to interrupt this unfolding scenario before
it reaches its full realization.
For many years, the United States pursued a policy of
engagement, integrating China into the international system and granting it
room to expand economically and diplomatically. At the same time, it maintained
a strategic military presence in Asia as a safeguard against potential
surprises. This approach began to shift with the ascension of Xi Jinping, whose
leadership introduced a more assertive, clearly defined, and confrontational
vision. In response, the contours of a new U.S. strategy emerged—defined
through what came to be known as the "Asia Pivot," a policy primarily
designed to contain China through a network of concentrated regional alliances.
The arrival of Donald Trump, altered the rules of the
game. He escalated the confrontation and transformed the conflict into one
defined by numbers and tariffs, categorizing China as a direct economic
adversary. His administration targeted major Chinese companies such as Huawei
and began dismantling the technological networks that linked the two countries.
For the first time, Washington officially declared that China was no longer a
partner, but a strategic rival seeking to reshape the international order to
its own advantage.
China, however, refrained from
engaging in direct confrontation, opting instead for a calculated and strategic
response. It began by restructuring its supply chains, increasing domestic and
regional investment, imposed targeted sanctions on American companies, and
initiated concrete measures to reduce its reliance on the U.S. market. These
actions indicate a deliberate posture of long-term preparedness, suggesting
that Beijing is positioning itself for a sustained geopolitical contest rather
than a temporary standoff.
The Indo-Pacific region remains the
most volatile arena of international competition, serving as the focal point of
strategic rivalry across the Indian and Pacific Oceans. In this context, the
United States has reinforced its military presence and expanded the
Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad), comprising Japan, India, and Australia,
with the aim of counterbalancing China’s expanding influence. In turn, Beijing
has pursued security agreements with smaller, yet geopolitically significant,
maritime nations. At the heart of this escalating tension lies Taiwan—the most
critical and perilous flashpoint—where strategic red lines converge, rhetoric
intensifies, and both sides regularly engage in provocative military maneuvers.
In South Asia, the geopolitical landscape has entered a
more intricate phase. China is extending political and security backing to
India’s adversaries, while the United States is working to elevate New Delhi as
a central strategic partner in its broader efforts to contain Beijing. Within
this evolving context, the outlines of a new Cold War are beginning to take
shape, characterized not by fixed ideological camps, but by shifting alliances,
economic leverage, and technological rivalry.
Talal Abu-Ghazaleh