I intended this column to focus on Elizabeth Economy's important new book, "The World According to China," which describes Xi Jinping's vision for China's future dominance in the world.
This book is important because it illuminates the ways in which Xi's China aims to shape a "radically transformed" international order — by force and by other means.
But I have to take a short detour to comment on President Joe Biden's disturbing slip of the tongue last week when speaking about a possible Russian invasion of Ukraine — because what happens between Moscow and Kyiv is bound to affect Xi Jinping's future moves.
Biden appeared to give a green light to Russia to attack Ukraine so long as it wasn't a full-scale invasion, saying that if it was "a minor incursion," the allies might disagree over how to respond. The White House later tried to walk back his comments, saying any invasion would be met with a swift, united allied response.
Yet it is highly unlikely that Vladimir Putin would mount a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, since he wants to avoid heavy Russian casualties. Far more likely is a short, sharp strike to degrade Ukraine's military followed by a swift Russian withdrawal. Or even a massive cyber and offshore missile attack on military targets with no invasion. The goal would be to show that a disunited West can't or won't prevent Ukraine from being forced back into the Russian orbit.
Yet, as Economy writes, this is exactly Xi's modus operandi, an effort to establish a dominant Chinese sphere of influence across Asia, while undermining U.S. alliances in the region. A Putin success in coercing Ukraine will reverberate in Beijing.
Indeed, Beijing has accelerated its efforts to seize what it claims are its sovereign lands. Many Americans are familiar with Beijing's designs on democratic Taiwan. But fewer Americans are aware of China's designs on islands claimed by Japan, undersea gas and oil claimed by Indonesia, territorial waters claimed by five countries bordering the South China Sea, and land border territories in India and Bhutan.
China has nibbled bit by bit to restore its "sovereignty" to these territories, taking land and seizing South China Sea atolls that it turns into military bases — without any serious pushback from Washington or its Asian allies. Beijing has shown utter disregard for international legal judgments not in its favor.