More Americans concerned China’s rise is threat to US national interest than any time since 1990: survey
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Nearly three in five Americans consider China’s rise a critical threat to US interests, a higher level than at any other point since the end of the Cold War, according to a new survey.
In the highest recorded level of concern since the council first asked the question in 1990, most respondents (58 per cent) consider China’s rise a crucial threat to the vital interests of the US.
When asked to specify the areas of greatest concern regarding China, 23 per cent pointed to China’s economic power, followed by its Communist political system, its human rights policy and its military power.
Craig Kafura, an assistant director for public opinion and foreign policy at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, said the 30-year peak in concern about the rise of China’s power was “certainly striking”.
Americans’ concerns about China “are more heavily weighted toward economic issues rather than the security or military issues that tend to dominate [Washington DC] discourse,” Kafura said.