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Political Warfare: The People's Republic of China's Strategy "to Win without Fighting"
Author(s) -
Kerry Gershaneck
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
marine corps university journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2164-4217
pISSN - 2164-4209
DOI - 10.21140/mcuj.2020110103
Subject(s) - battlefield , politics , existentialism , china , government (linguistics) , political science , political economy , soviet union , law , sociology , history , ancient history , linguistics , philosophy
The Commandant of the Marine Corps has identified the People’s Republic of China (PRC) as an existential threat to the United States in the long term. To successfully confront this threat, the United States must relearn how to fight on the political warfare battlefield. Although increasingly capable militarily, the PRC employs political warfare as its primary weapon to destroy its adversaries. However, America no longer has the capacity to compete and win on the political warfare battlefield: this capacity atrophied in the nearly three decades following the collapse of the Soviet Union. Failure to understand China’s political warfare and how to fight it may well lead to America’s strategic defeat before initiation of armed conflict and to operational defeat of U.S. military forces on the battlefield. The study concludes with recommendations the U.S. government must take to successfully counter this existential threat.

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