Publication
13 Apr 2011
Since the end of the Cold War, the improved political and economic relationship between Beijing and Moscow has affected a range of international security issues. China and Russia have expanded their bilateral economic and security cooperation. In addition, they have pursued distinct, yet parallel, policies regarding many global and regional issues. Yet, Chinese and Russian approaches to a range of significant subjects are still largely uncoordinated and at times in conflict. Economic exchanges between China and Russia remain minimal compared to those found between most friendly countries, let alone allies.
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English (PDF, 11 pages, 1.0 MB) |
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Author | Richard Weitz |
Series | CNAS Congressional Testimony |
Publisher | Center for a New American Security (CNAS) |
Copyright | © 2011 Center for a New American Security (CNAS) |