The future of EU-China-US relations
What are the prospects for transatlantic cooperation on China now that a new US administration is in power?
ECFR Alumni · Associate Senior Policy Fellow
Europe-China relations, US-China relations, Chinese Foreign and Economic Policy, Transatlantic relations, East Asia, South Asia
English
Andrew Small is a senior transatlantic fellow with the Asia programme at the German Marshall Fund of the United States. Additionally, he was an associate senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations.
He was based in GMF’s Brussels office for five years, where he established the Asia program and the Stockholm China Forum, GMF’s biannual China policy conference. He previously worked as the director of the Foreign Policy Centre’s Beijing office; as a visiting fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and was an ESU scholar in the office of Senator Edward M. Kennedy. He is the author of The China-Pakistan Axis: Asia’s New Geopolitics.
What are the prospects for transatlantic cooperation on China now that a new US administration is in power?
An Oxford-style debate in cooperation with Intelligence² Germany
The mere prospect of a strengthened EU-US alliance forced Beijing to make concessions to Brussels last month – a lesson on the power of global coalition-building that Europe failed to take on
Europe should upgrade its security activities, and seize the moment to push multilateral institutions up the agenda. But it will be Europe’s connectivity agenda that provides the golden thread running through its foreign policy and its other objectives in the region
The crisis is intensifying demands for Europe to puts its China policy on a more open, accountable, and values-based footing
The US-China trade deal could make life tougher for Europe. But there are risks for China too in provoking greater coalition-building against it
ECFR’s policy experts examine what the Taliban takeover means for countries and regions around the world: Europe, the US, the Middle East, Russia, China, Iran, Turkey, and the Sahel
Europe should upgrade its security activities, and seize the moment to push multilateral institutions up the agenda. But it will be Europe’s connectivity agenda that provides the golden thread running through its foreign policy and its other objectives in the region
The crisis is intensifying demands for Europe to puts its China policy on a more open, accountable, and values-based footing
Numerous European leaders are beating a path to Beijing’s door. ECFR Asia director Janka Oertel and the German Marshall Fund’s Andrew Small reflect on European wishful thinking, clever tactical manoeuvres, and long-term strategic choices
ECFR’s Janka Oertel and Andrew Small discuss how the new government in Berlin will adjust Germany’s approach to China
ECFR’s Janka Oertel and Andrew Small discuss China’s attitude towards the NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan
The mere prospect of a strengthened EU-US alliance forced Beijing to make concessions to Brussels last month – a lesson on the power of global coalition-building that Europe failed to take on
The US-China trade deal could make life tougher for Europe. But there are risks for China too in provoking greater coalition-building against it
Mark Leonard welcomes Julien Barnes-Dacey, Cinzia Bianco and Andrew Small, to talk about the new Saudi – Iran deal
How do chips decide power in today’s geopolitical competition?
How will the Western withdrawal impact on the state of European defence and military capabilities?
What lies behind China’s dual circulation strategy? How will the EU approach all of this? And are European policy-makers really prepared to deal with this new challenge coming from China?
What are the prospects for transatlantic cooperation on China now that a new US administration is in power?
This panel is part of the annual Japan-Europe Core Group Warsaw 2022 on “The Future of Russia-China Relations – Implications for European and Japanese Foreign Policy
The policy brief “Promoting European strategic sovereignty in Asia” by Janka Oertel and Andrew Small will serve to kick off the discussion, which will be held in English, under Chatham House rules
An Oxford-style debate in cooperation with Intelligence² Germany