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PERCEPTION AND MISPERCEPTION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   176094


Perception and Misperception in U.S.‐China Relations / Scobell, Andrew   Journal Article
Scobell, Andrew Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract IN 2020, RELATIONS BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES and the People's Republic of China (PRC) are characterized by a climate of confrontation. 1 Tensions have escalated across a range of military, economic, and technology issues to the point that each side is portraying the other in stark adversarial terms. U.S. secretary of state Mike Pompeo has described the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) as “truly hostile to the United States,” and Beijing perceives senior officials in Washington as possessing considerable “hostility” toward China. 2 Indeed, some seasoned scholars opine that the temperature of U.S.‐China relations is at its lowest point in decades
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2
ID:   158871


Perception and misperception on the Korean Peninsula : how unwanted wars begin / Jervis, Robert ; Rapp-Hooper, Mira   Journal Article
Jervis, Robert Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract North Korea has all but completed its quest for nuclear weapons. It has demonstrated its ability to produce boosted-fission bombs and may be able to make fusion ones, as well. It can likely miniaturize them to fit atop a missile. And it will soon be able to deliver this payload to the continental United States. North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, has declared his country’s nuclear deterrent [1] complete and, despite his willingness to meet with U.S. President Donald Trump, is unlikely to give it up. Yet Washington continues to demand that Pyongyang relinquish the nuclear weapons it already has, and the Trump administration has pledged that the North Korean regime will never acquire a nuclear missile that can hit the United States. The result is a new, more dangerous phase in the U.S.–North Korean relationship: a high-stakes nuclear standoff.
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