Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 10
China's overconfidence raises risk of weaponising power against the United States
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 10

China's overconfidence raises risk of weaponising power against the United States

5 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 10
  • Ahead of President Donald Trump's visit this week, a New York Times opinion writer says anti-US narratives and the viral “American kill line” meme are spreading across China.
  • The article argues false perceptions of US economic decay, crime and decline are hardening Beijing's stance and making Chinese leaders less likely to back down in future confrontations.
  • It says the United States still has low violent crime, unmatched geopolitical and financial power, and an economy more than 50% larger than China's, despite nearly half of Chinese respondents seeing waning US influence.
Is China's confidence a true show of strength or a mask for its deep internal crises?
How does a viral meme about American collapse translate into real-world military moves in the South China Sea?
When two rivals both believe the other is a declining power, how close are they to a catastrophic miscalculation?