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Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War

Odd Lots · Nov 27, 2025

Professor Graham Allison explains the 'Thucydides Trap,' analyzing if the U.S. and a rising China are destined for war or can avert catastrophe.

Great Power Wars Are Sparked by Third-Party Incidents, Not Direct Confrontation

Historically, rising and ruling powers don't stumble into war directly. Instead, their heightened distrust creates a tinderbox where a seemingly minor incident involving a third party (like the assassination in Sarajevo pre-WWI) can escalate uncontrollably into a catastrophic conflict.

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War thumbnail

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War

Odd Lots·3 months ago

China's Leadership Views US Social Contradictions as Proof of Irreversible Decline

China's inner circle, led by Xi Jinping, believes the U.S. is in terminal decline. They view American social and political paradoxes—like New York, the center of capitalism, electing a socialist—not as features of a complex democracy, but as evidence of a fracturing and decaying society.

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War thumbnail

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War

Odd Lots·3 months ago

Harvard's Graham Allison: US-China Conflict Stems from Psychological Shock, Not Military Might

The core driver of a 'Thucydides Trap' conflict is the psychological distress experienced by the ruling power. For the U.S., the challenge to its identity as '#1' creates a disorienting fear and paranoia, making it prone to miscalculation, independent of actual military or economic shifts.

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War thumbnail

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War

Odd Lots·3 months ago

China Seeks Global Deference, Not Ideological Conversion Like the Soviet Union

Unlike the Soviet Union's missionary zeal to spread communism, China does not want other nations to become Chinese. Its worldview is centered on being the 'Middle Kingdom'—the sun which others orbit. It desires respect and a preeminent position, not to export its political system.

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War thumbnail

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War

Odd Lots·3 months ago

Political Pledges for Supply Chain Independence Rarely Lead to Meaningful Action

Politicians predictably declare initiatives for domestic production of critical goods like munitions or rare earths when dependencies are exposed. However, these declarations rarely translate into effective action, suggesting we must learn to manage economic entanglement as a form of mutual deterrence rather than wish it away.

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War thumbnail

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War

Odd Lots·3 months ago

The Theory That Economic Entanglement Prevents War Was Famously Disproven by WWI

The modern belief that deep economic ties between the U.S. and China will prevent war echoes Norman Angell's 1910 bestseller, "The Great Illusion." That book argued European economies were too intertwined for a major war, a theory tragically debunked just four years later by World War I.

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War thumbnail

Graham Allison on the Risks of a US-China War

Odd Lots·3 months ago