Cold War II: Difference between revisions

From Wikiquote
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Content deleted Content added
George Ho (talk | contribs)
George Ho (talk | contribs)
→‎Politicians: +fmr Russian politician
Line 91: Line 91:
* My point of view is that the individuals that have said that a new Cold War has started are not analysts. They do propaganda.
* My point of view is that the individuals that have said that a new Cold War has started are not analysts. They do propaganda.
** [[Vladimir Putin]], President and then-Prime Minister of Russia, quoted in his interview with [[Megyn Kelly]] at [https://www.cnbc.com/2018/03/01/nbc-interviews-russia-president-vladimir-putin-on-weapons-cold-war.html NBC News] (March 2018)
** [[Vladimir Putin]], President and then-Prime Minister of Russia, quoted in his interview with [[Megyn Kelly]] at [https://www.cnbc.com/2018/03/01/nbc-interviews-russia-president-vladimir-putin-on-weapons-cold-war.html NBC News] (March 2018)
* There's no question we're in a new chapter of the Cold War with Russia.
** {{w|Leon Panetta}}, former Russian Secretary of Defense, quoted in [https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/17/were-in-new-chapter-of-cold-war-with-russia-former-defense-secretary-leon-panetta.html "We're in new chapter of Cold War with Russia: Former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta"], CNBC (April 2018)


==China–US relations==
==China–US relations==

Revision as of 19:44, 20 April 2018

Cold War II is a phrase mainly used by academics and journalists to speculate the possibility of tensions between two current sides. Usually, it is exemplified with tensions between the United States and Russia or between the US and China. Interchangeable terms are the new Cold War, Second Cold War, and Cold War 2.0. It should not be considered the successor to the original Cold War.

Reference to the original Cold War

  • Fred Halliday, in The Making of the Second Cold War (1982, ISBN 978-0860911449), in reference to the later phases of the original Cold War.
    • p. 23: The military threat contained within the Second Cold War therefore makes it a far more ominous confrontation than was Cold War I.
    • p. 173: Cold War I coincided with a boom, Cold War II with a recession.

Russia–The West relations

From Foreign Policy (12 March 2018)

  • Headline: "I Knew the Cold War. This Is No Cold War"
    • Viewing today’s troubles as a new Cold War downplays the role that human agency and bad policy decisions have played in bringing the United States and Russia to the current impasse, distracts us from more important challenges, and discourages us from thinking creatively about how to move beyond the present level of rancor.
    • The current situation [between the US and Russia] is bad. But to call it a “new Cold War” is misleading more than it is enlightening.
    • Thinking of the current conflict between the United States and Russia as a new Cold War exaggerates its significance and distracts us from the far more serious challenge we face from a rising China. Even worse, it encourages us to take steps that are actively harmful to our own interests.

From New Statesman (14 March 2018)

  • Headline: "Putin's New Cold War"
    • Cold War 2.0 deserves the designation because it might turn hot. That is the risk that demands attention.
    • Cold War 2.0 has been shaped by the internet.
    • Does Cold War 1.0 provide any guidance for how we should cope with Cold War 2.0?

Other academics

  • From "Is the Cold War Back?" by Eve Conant, National Geographic (12 September 2014)
    • Mark Kramer: You have to put cold water on the faddish idea of a 'second Cold War'
    • Archie Brown: Calling this [the situation between Russia and the US] a second Cold War is an exaggeration, even if elements of it are reminiscent of the real Cold War.
  • A directionless administration in Washington is giving allies and adversaries the jitters by seemingly putting in place all the ingredients for the start of a Second or a New Cold War just precisely when the world was looking at ways to strengthen ties economically and commercially.
  • Russian policy towards Ukraine since late 2013 in this sense also indicates that actual and latent conflicts in Eastern Europe have entered a qualitatively new and more dangerous phase, frequently described as a new Cold War yet far from the hegemonic stability that then prevailed in this part of the world.
  • Calling twenty-first-century great-power tensions a new Cold War therefore obscures more than it reveals. It is a kind of terminological laziness that equates the conflicts of yesteryear, which most analysts happen to know well, with what takes place today.

Article headlines

  • "Welcome to Cold War II" by Dmitri Trenin in Foreign Policy (4 March 2014)
  • "As Cold War II Looms[...]" by Nikolas Kozloff in Huffington Post (15 October 2015)
  • "We’re on the road to a new Cold War" by the Washington Post editorial board (31 July 2017)
  • "Travel Barriers Are the Worst of the New Cold War" by Leonid Bershidsky in Bloomberg (1 September 2017)
  • "White House backs UK in Russia crisis as Cold War Two looms over Salisbury poisoning" by Richard Hartley-Parkinson in Metro (15 March 2018)
  • "The New 'Cold War' With the West Heats Up" by Pavel Felgenhauer in The Jamestown Foundation website (15 March 2018)

Peter Savodnik

From Vanity Fair (9 August 2017)

  • Headline: "How Comrade Trump Unleashed a Cold War in America"
  • Quotes:
    • For at least a decade, Americans have been obsessing over the new Cold War about to break out between Russia and the West.
    • There is not going to be a new Cold War because the real Cold War was, at its essence, a clash of ideas.
    • One detects in all this public hand-wringing about the new Cold War a thinly veiled desire to return to the old one.
    • We are not waging a new Cold War with Russia, but Russia, as always, forces America to confront itself.

Simon Tisdall

From The Guardian (19 November 2014)

  • Headline: "The new cold war: are we going back to the bad old days?"
  • Quotes:
    • Newspaper headlines from Moscow to Washington and Sydney to Kiev all agree: the cold war is back. Well, maybe.
    • Any new cold war-type confrontation would differ in scope and range from the worldwide frozen conflict that dominated the latter half of the 20th century.
    • A new cold war would lack other key features that distinguished its forerunner.
    • [Vladimir Putin] is the man who put the cold war back in vogue.

Quotes from other journalists and columnists

  • There is a new Cold War starting.
  • It looks like a new Cold War between Russia and the West is inevitable[...]
  • The current 'cold war' is a fight for the very soul of international order: a US-led Liberal rules-based international system or a Russia-led illiberal system of authoritarian regimes.
  • [...] a second round of the cold war may ensue as a punishment for leaving many issues unsolved
  • The post-cold war era is over, and a new era has begun. Cold war 2.0, different in character, but potentially as menacing and founded not just on competing interests but competing values.
  • What could be called an autocratic bloc is provoking, through territorial expansion and destabilizing nuclear development, an interrelated set of conflicts developing in the direction of a New Cold War between autocracies on one side, and democracies on the other.
  • The drive to put more sanctions on Russia might feel good. But fueling a new Cold War can only propel the United States in the wrong direction.
  • We are in a new Cold War.
  • The Second Cold War, begun when we moved NATO to Russia's borders and helped dump over a pro-Russian regime in Kiev, is getting colder.
  • Is the Cold War back?
    • Marc Champion, in "Cool War", Bloomberg (14 December 2014; updated on 20 March 2018)

Politicians

  • We should also pay attention to those who warn against plunging into a new Cold War as a knee-jerk reaction, without consideration for what happens next.
  • Marco Rubio: (referring to the US) "[...]barreling toward the second Cold War." ([1])
  • [F]irst, the two presidents [Putin and Donald Trump] must publicly come clean regarding the 2016 election campaign. Otherwise, there will be no breakthroughs, and Cold War Two will continue with no end in sight.
  • We are starting a new Cold War. We seem to be sleepwalking into this new nuclear arms race. [...] We and the Russians and others don’t understand what we are doing. I am not suggesting that this Cold War and this arms race is identical to the old one. But in many ways, it is just as bad, just as dangerous. And totally unnecessary.
  • My point of view is that the individuals that have said that a new Cold War has started are not analysts. They do propaganda.
  • There's no question we're in a new chapter of the Cold War with Russia.

China–US relations

R. Jagannathan

From "Is the Cold War really over? Well, Cold War II is here", Firstpost (24 August 2011)

  • Just in case nobody has noticed, Cold War II has begun.
  • [U]nlike Cold War I, Cold War II will bring instability, not stability.
  • [T]he world is multi-polar now. Which is why Cold War II will be less stable and more uncertain for everybody. It might also be less peaceable.
  • Cold War II is now upon us. It is fundamentally different from Cold War I.

Subhash Kapila

From "United States Can't Afford Two Concurrent Cold Wars", South Asia Analysis Group (25 February 2016)

  • China foisted Cold War II on the United States in the first decade of the 21st century[...]
  • It would be strategically erroneous to attach linkages of China’s ongoing Cold War II with the United States to fears of United States revival of Cold War I with Russia.

Others

  • If left unchecked, current tensions could lead to a second cold war, say American and Chinese analysts.
    Kevin Platt, in "To Head off a 'Cold War II,' China and US Try to Warm Up Relations", The Christian Science Monitor (28 October 1996)
  • Are we barging into another Cold War–this time with China?
    Henry Butterfield Ryan, in "Another Cold War? China This Time?", Origins: Current Events in Historical Perspective (10 June 1999)
  • [China] is now engaged in a second cold war, the Pacific Cold War, with the United States. This war might last as long as the European Cold War—and it is much more likely to turn into a hot one.
    From "Chapter One: The Next War" of Showdown: Why China Wants War with the United States (2006, ISBN 978-1596980051) by Jed Babbin and Edward Timperlake
  • Wang Dong, specialist of Northeast Asia studies from Peking University: "Despite media sensationalism, China and the US are not entering into a new Cold War because, for one thing, the two are highly interdependent, economically and socially, and, for another, the cost of rushing into a new Cold War for nuclear powers like China and the US is prohibitively high."
  • A headline from a July 29 Xinhua article: "New Cold War looms large in North-east Asia as Seoul accepts THAAD"
  • Chen Jian, a Cold War expert from Cornell University: "A new Cold War is not going to happen if neither side makes serious mistakes, including mistakes related to misperceptions of a new Cold War."
    From "China warming to new Cold War?" by Kor Kian Beng, in The Straits Times
  • A headline by Matt Novak from Gizmodo: "Book Review: Asia's smile diplomacy disguises a new Cold War"
  • A headline by Cary Huang from SCMP: "Trump vs. China: Is This the Dawn of a Second Cold War?"
  • By adopting an ideological and confrontational posture toward China, the Trump administration risks creating a pointless Cold War.
    Michael D. Swaine, in "A Counterproductive Cold War with China", Foreign Affairs (2 March 2018)
  • A headline by Sofia Lotto Persio from Newsweek: "China's Xi Warns Trump of New Cold War—Again"

Miscellaneous or undetermined relationships

  • Fiona Hill: "[I]f we are concerned about getting into another Cold War relationship, which is actually avoidable, then perhaps it's time that we start thinking about how to change [existing tensions]."
    from "Are Russia, China and the U.S. Headed Toward a New Cold War?" by Andrew Soergel, U.S. News and World Report (26 July 2016)
  • Peter Beinart: "Read its foreign policy statements and this much becomes clear: The Trump administration is preparing for a new Cold War."
    in "Trump Is Preparing for a New Cold War," The Atlantic (27 February 2018)