Monterey Trialogue

著者: Peter Slezkine
  • サマリー

  • The Monterey Trialogue – a program hosted by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey – provides a unique platform for constructive exchange among experts and ex-officials from the United States, Russia, and China. Since the middle of the 20th century, the shifting relationship among the United States, Russia, and China has had a profound impact on each country separately and on the world as a whole. Yet the breakdown of contacts, combined with political, cultural, and linguistic barriers, have hindered the study of the full trilateral dynamic. At a time when even bilateral channels of communication have begun to break down, the Monterey Trialogue offers a new and necessary perspective on the defining geopolitical relationship of our time. Peter Slezkine, the Director of the Monterey Trialogue, hosts a series of conversations with experts and ex-officials from the United States, Russia, China and beyond to discuss cold wars past and present, potential areas of conflict and cooperation, and alternative visions of global order, among other subjects.
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あらすじ・解説

The Monterey Trialogue – a program hosted by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey – provides a unique platform for constructive exchange among experts and ex-officials from the United States, Russia, and China. Since the middle of the 20th century, the shifting relationship among the United States, Russia, and China has had a profound impact on each country separately and on the world as a whole. Yet the breakdown of contacts, combined with political, cultural, and linguistic barriers, have hindered the study of the full trilateral dynamic. At a time when even bilateral channels of communication have begun to break down, the Monterey Trialogue offers a new and necessary perspective on the defining geopolitical relationship of our time. Peter Slezkine, the Director of the Monterey Trialogue, hosts a series of conversations with experts and ex-officials from the United States, Russia, China and beyond to discuss cold wars past and present, potential areas of conflict and cooperation, and alternative visions of global order, among other subjects.
エピソード
  • Stephen Wertheim, Senior Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
    2024/11/01

    This week, our guest is Stephen Wertheim, Senior Fellow in the American Statecraft Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. We discuss the origins of “isolationism,” historical hypotheticals, the United States’ relative interests in the Middle East, Europe and Asia, Ukraine and Taiwan, and an “America first” policy for the Democratic party, among other subjects.

    Time Stamps:
    • 00:00:45 PhD in history and pivot to policy
    • 00:07:38 Charges of “isolationism” from the 1930s through Trump
    • 00:15:54 Should the US have done anything differently during WWII or the Cold War?
    • 00:19:43 The collapse of the Communist bloc and American primacy unbound
    • 00:25:00 Need to draw down in the Middle East
    • 00:26:48 Let Europeans take greater charge of their own security
    • 00:36:00 How should the US react to the rise of China
    • 00:41:12 Taiwan and Ukraine
    • 00:51:47 An “America first” policy for the Democratic party

    *The Monterey Trialogue Podcast is hosted by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies and produced by University FM.

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    1 時間 3 分
  • Dmitry Novikov, Deputy Head of the School of International Relations at the Higher School of Economics
    2024/10/23

    This week, our guest is Dmitry Novikov, Deputy Head of the School of International Relations at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow, Russia. We discuss the difficulties of being an Americanist in Moscow, the sources of US-Russian conflict, and Russia’s future as a “Eurasian” power, among other subjects.

    Time Stamps:
    • 00:00:38 What is like being an Americanist in Moscow right now?
    • 00:04:22 Russian perceptions of US domestic politics
    • 00:08:44 Russia’s “realist” understanding of international relations
    • 00:10:51 Russia’s efforts to join the West
    • 00:20:05 Russia as a Eurasian state
    • 00:23:20 When did Russia begin to pivot East?
    • 00:28:08 Russia as logistics corridor, security provider, and source of raw materials
    • 00:39:17 Need for stabilization with the West
    • 00:44:00 A new Russian identity?
    • 00:49:13 The growing importance of Islam in Russia
    • 00:53:00 The Cold War “lessons” that drive US and Russian elites

    *The Monterey Trialogue Podcast is hosted by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies and produced by University FM.

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    1 時間 2 分
  • DA Wei, Director of the Center for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University
    2024/10/16

    My guest today is DA Wei, Professor of International Relations and Director of the Center for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University. We discuss Wei’s time at CICIR and Tsinghua, his recent visits to the US and Russia, Taiwan and the South China Sea, and the potential positives of partial decoupling, among other subjects.

    Time Stamps:
    • 00:00:49 What is CICIR
    • 00:04:13 Tsinghua’s Center for International Security and Strategy
    • 00:09:03 Impressions from recent trip to US
    • 00:11:16 Potential consequences of Harris or Trump presidencies for China
    • 00:14:26 Is chaos in the US good for China?
    • 00:15:49 Sources of US-China competition
    • 00:21:29 Impressions from recent trip to Russia
    • 00:26:15 Comparison of US-China and US-Russia relations
    • 00:30:35 Consequences of COVID
    • 00:33:06 Potential positives of decoupling
    • 00:40:0 Taiwan and South China Sea

    *The Monterey Trialogue Podcast is hosted by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies and produced by University FM.

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    42 分

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