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The right US-China policy prioritizes collaboration despite competition

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (L) follows China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi (R) during a meeting at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing on April 26, 2024. (Photo by Mark Schiefelbein/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

In May 2022, Secretary of State Antony Blinken faced down China hawks and laid out the Biden administration’s policy for the U.S.-China relationship: “invest, align, compete.”

As we celebrate its second anniversary, that is still the administration’s China approach — and it is the right one if it leads to cooperation and détente, and not inexorably to conflict.

However, conflict and hostility currently dominate the China discourse. It has been decades since there has been a comparable level of hostility — focused in that case on the Soviet Union, a nation quite unlike China. 

How far different? In addition to basic raw materials and agricultural commodities, the Soviet Union exported over 40 global conflicts, including direct territorial invasions. 

China, by contrast, has succeeded in lifting its people from poverty, contributed to global economic growth and has over the past few decades provided critical manufactured goods such as inexpensive solar panels, at a time when no one in Western Europe or the U.S. has been able to produce them at the same scale. China is vital to a sustainable global economy — it was the fourth largest U.S. goods-trading partner in 2023, with a total trade volume of $575 billion.


It’s also true that China has clearly acted in ways that challenge the world economic order, despite the fact that it benefits from that economic order along with the rest of the world. Given that contradictory reality, “invest, align, compete” has been an effective, productive approach. 

It calms the rhetoric, balances the complex dynamics of engagement with China pragmatically and captures the full nuance of the relationship in a way that has generated specific policy solutions while also addressing critical national security concerns. 

But “invest, align, compete” is not easy to manage. It places demands not only on China but also on the U.S. and our allies; demands that we have not yet fully met. To understand the positive impact of “invest, align, compete” to date, look at it through the lens of infrastructure investment.

But more is needed. The U.S. must not only invest in itself and align with its partners, it must also invest in the China relationship. The ultimate goal of “invest, align compete” is to make the relationship truly cooperative and productive while collectively maintaining and enhancing the international rules-based system that has helped everyone including China achieve extraordinary growth over the last decades.

To achieve this, three steps are required:

China will not collapse like the former Soviet Union, an artificial construct that was bound to disappear. It is time to step back from the brink, stop talking about a new Cold War (or a hot one) and establish a true engagement policy.

Sadek Wahba is chair of the Wahba Institute for Strategic Competition at The Wilson Center (WISC) and a member of the President’s National Infrastructure Advisory Council (NIAC). The views expressed in the article do not represent those of NIAC, WISC or the Wilson Center.