From Hudson Institute Limited Series: Rising Axis <[email protected]>
Subject Great Power Competition and the Rising Axis
Date September 18, 2024 11:00 AM
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“Revisionist powers are on the rise and determined to disrupt the global order,” wrote Nadia Schadlow [[link removed]] in the Wall Street Journal [[link removed]] last fall. For years, Hudson’s experts have traced the interconnections within what Hudson’s H.R. McMaster [[link removed]] has called an “ axis of aggressors [[link removed]]”—a China-led coalition that includes Russia, Iran, and North Korea and seeks to replace the United States–led international system with one more favorable to authoritarianism and tyranny. “ China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea [[link removed]] want nothing more than to build a world order that they will control,” wrote Hudson President and CEO John Walters [[link removed]] following his trip to Ukraine earlier this year.

Bottom Line

Watch her full remarks here. [[link removed]]

Future installments of this newsletter will examine how these aggressors are countering the US and showcase the depth of Hudson’s analysis on how America and its allies can compete with and defeat this axis.

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Facts and Figures

1. Russia relies on China, Iran, and North Korea to sustain its war machine.

The People’s Republic of China provides Russia with 70 to 90 percent [[link removed]] of its computer numeric control (CNC) machine tools, which automate the production of precision-guided munitions and aircraft parts, and 90 percent of the microelectronics critical for its production of missiles, tanks, and aircraft.

Russia receives hundreds of drones from Iran each month and uses them to terrorize Ukrainian civilians. The two autocracies now produce hundreds more drones [[link removed]] each month in a jointly operated plant in Russia. And recently, Iran has reportedly begun to provide the Kremlin with tactical ballistic missiles [[link removed]].

North Korea has provided Russia [[link removed]] with millions of artillery shells and numerous types of ballistic missiles.

For more, watch or read Peter Rough’s testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee. [[link removed]]

2. China supports and encourages military and economic collaboration among authoritarian regimes around the world.

In 2021, China and Iran signed a 25-year military agreement [[link removed]] to advance joint training and exercises, research, and weapons development. Additionally, the PRC has long been the leading market for Iranian oil and has increased its imports in recent years [[link removed]].

In 2023, Sino-Russian trade reached $240 billion [[link removed]], a 26.3 percent increase over 2022. Oil sales drove much of this increase [[link removed]].

China is the top destination [[link removed]] for both legal and blacklisted North Korean exports, the sales of which fund Pyongyang’s nuclear program.

For more, read Jonathan Ward’s op-ed, “Want a Stable World? Disengage from the Chinese Economy.” [[link removed]]

3. America can do more to combat the rise of this axis.

The US needs to anticipate and capitalize on future geopolitical disruptions [[link removed]] in great power competition. This includes leading in evolving technologies like fusion energy [[link removed]] and artificial intelligence.

The Biden administration’s policies [[link removed]] to reduce US oil and gas production while tolerating Russian production and exports has given China access to a large supply of discounted energy [[link removed]]. Instead, Washington should return to the strong, stable energy policies [[link removed]] that made America the primary guarantor of global security and prosperity.

The US military needs to leverage both established and emerging technologies [[link removed]] to deter a Chinese invasion of Taiwan without compromising its ability to project power in other theaters.

For more, read Bryan Clark and Dan Patt’s Hudson report Hedging Bets: Rethinking Force Design for a Post-Dominance Era. [[link removed]]

Act Now

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