National Security Council on Relationship with China: It’s Complicated, Not a Competition
Washington, DC,
September 28, 2016
WASHINGTON - Political correctness and micromanagement from the White House National Security Council have reached new heights in a shocking Navy Times story entitled, “White House tells the Pentagon to quit talking about competition with China.”
Political correctness and micromanagement from the White House National Security Council have reached new heights in a shocking Navy Times story entitled, “White House tells the Pentagon to quit talking about competition with China.” Pentagon officials, including Secretary Ashton Carter, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Joseph Dunford, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral John Richardson, and other top military officials up until recently often cited the central themes of a “rising China” and a “great power competition” when discussing the country. In fact, when pressed at a recent Senate hearing, General Dunford was emphatic in his assertion that the U.S. is in a great power competition with China, responding, “We are. Absolutely right.” The National Security Staff appear to disagree with the nation’s top military leaders, preferring to stress cooperation and flexibility, while pointing to areas of progress on climate change and global health. |