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Kevin Rudd in conversation with the Hon Julie Bishop | Australian National University
Kevin Rudd is in conversation with Julie Bishop on his new book, The Avoidable War. The Dangers of a Catastrophic Conflict between the US and Xi Jinping's China, in which the former Prime Minister of Australia, and deeply knowledgeable China watcher, proposes a way forward for the US and China to avoid a superpower conflict. Kevin Rudd offers a chilling vision of what that might look like if it was unleashed.
Interview with Murdoch’s Sky News
My personal encounter with the Murdoch media while out campaigning with Dr Michelle Ananda-Rajah, the Labor candidate for Higgins. The Murdoch mob don’t like it when you dish it back to them.
Xi Jinping’s Year of Instability: Asia Society
In the latest of a series of speeches on China's political economy, Asia Society and Asia Society Policy Institute (ASPI) President Kevin Rudd assesses the severe economic headwinds facing Chinese President Xi Jinping as he seeks to extend his rule during this fall's 20th Communist Party Congress. Among the topics Rudd covers are the impact of Russia's war in Ukraine, a slow-rolling crisis in China's property sector, falling private sector confidence, and steadfast commitment to "Zero COVID." Following the speech, Rudd discussed these issues and more with ASPI Senior Fellow Anna Ashton. (1 hr., 2 min.)
Xi Jinping Scrambles as China’s Economy Stumbles | Wall Street Journal
If Xi Jinping was hoping for an uneventful and stable 2022 before his planned “re-election” this fall, he must be disappointed. In January I wrote that “China’s economic future isn’t looking all that bright and is starting to have political implications for President Xi Jinping.” That turned out to be an understatement.
On The Avoidable War | Studio 10
Former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd gives his take on the Federal Election campaign and weighs in on China’s expansionism.
Far from having a leftwing bias, the ABC has been tamed by cuts and incessant attacks | The Guardian
The clearest example is the ABC’s budget. Despite a crystal-clear election promise in 2013 of “no cuts to the ABC”, the national broadcaster is facing $1.2bn of cumulative cuts over a decade. These cuts have felled two television programs that were crucial to government accountability, Lateline and the state-based 7.30 program (once known as Stateline), among many others.
The Hon Kevin Rudd AC In-Conversation with The Hon Mike Rann AC CNZM | The Hawke Centre
The Avoidable War demystifies the actions of both sides, explaining and translating them for the benefit of the other. Geopolitical disaster is still avoidable, but only if these two giants can find a way to coexist without betraying their core interests through what Rudd calls "managed strategic competition". Should they fail, down that path lies the possibility of a war that would rewrite the future of both countries, our region, and the world.
Kevin Rudd in Conversation with the Hon. John Baird | Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy
The relationship between the U.S. and China has reverberating consequences around the world. The ties between the two superpowers rests on a seismic fault—of cultural misunderstanding, historical grievance, and ideological incompatibility.
Book Launch 'The Avoidable War' with the Hon Kevin Rudd AC | James Cook University
Join former Prime Minister, the Hon Kevin Rudd, as he explores what a superpower conflict in Australia’s region might look like, and proposes a way forward to avoid it. Kevin Rudd has become one of today’s most thoughtful analysts of China’s development and in his latest book “The Avoidable War” he offers real insight into the mindsets of leaders whose judgments will determine if a war will be fought.
Review: The Avoidable War — averting a conflict between the US and China | Financial Times
Few western statesmen have enjoyed much quality time with Xi Jinping, especially as China’s president has of late retreated into pandemic-era seclusion. Kevin Rudd is one who did. “I spent a total of 10 hours in conversation with Xi in six separate meetings, including about three hours around a winter fire at the prime ministerial residence,” he writes in The Avoidable War, describing a moment back in 2010, when Xi was Chinese vice-premier and Rudd was Australia’s prime minister.
In Conversation with Kevin Rudd | Australian Strategic Policy Institute
At the ASPI Masterclass ‘China’s emerging military and strategic capabilities’, the Hon Mr Kevin Rudd, 26th Prime Minister of Australia, delivered a keynote address on China and touched on some of the themes he explores in his new book ‘The Avoidable War: The Dangers of a Catastrophic Conflict between the US and XI Jingping’s China’.
Kevin Rudd on how to avoid war between the US and China | Brookings Podcast
In this 100th episode of Dollar & Sense podcast, former Australia Prime MinisterKevin Rudd, now president of Asia Society, discusses his new book, The Avoidable War: The Dangers of a Catastrophic Conflict between the US and Xi Jinping’s China (Public Affairs, 2022). Rudd calls Taiwan the “core strategic tension” between China and the United States, discusses how the U.S. and China can manage strategic competition, looks at trade issues in the region, and describes China’s challenge to the current U.S.-led international order.
China–Solomons deal ‘politically illiterate’ if Beijing wants better ties with Australia | Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Former prime minister Kevin Rudd says China’s security deal with Solomon Islands was a ‘politically illiterate’ move if Beijing is sincere about improving relations with Australia.
Jan Fran Has Issues | A Rational Fear
So what does a war between US and China mean for us? Australia’s economy is very dependent on China, but we’re also besties with the US. Jan Fran interviews Kevin Rudd on his latest book ‘The Avoidable War’
Is War With China Inevitable? | The Little Red Podcast
As Australia’s Defence Minister warns his nation to ‘prepare for war’ with China, there’s a growing feeling of inevitability about a future conflict between China and the United States. Against this rather bleak backdrop, we hear from one global figure who has had unusual access to China's leaders: Australia's former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd. The President and CEO of the Asia Society, he describes himself as a Sinologist at the tables of power. He's probably the only Mandarin-speaking world leader to have one-on-ones with Xi Jinping and hear Jiang Zemin's rendition of O Sole Mio at Sydney Opera House. Rudd is publishing a book called The Avoidable War: The Dangers of a Catastrophic Conflict Between the United States and Xi Jinping’s China. This episode is a live recording of his Melbourne book launch, hosted by Louisa. In it, Rudd unpacks the logic of a future war, warns of Xi's biggest vulnerability and predicts a rocky few months ahead. This event was co-hosted by the Asia Society, the Wheeler Centre and RMIT Live.
COVID shutdowns in Shanghai | CNN
The bottom line is [COVID shutdowns] are already effecting a number of manufacturing & that is already impacting supply chains.
The Avoidable War: The Dangers of a Catastrophic Conflict between the U.S. and Xi Jinping’s China | National Committee on U.S. China Relations
According to Mr. Rudd, a former Australian prime minister who has studied, lived in, and worked with China for more than forty years, the relationship between the United States and China is especially volatile. It sits atop cultural misunderstanding, historical grievance, and ideological incompatibility. No other nations are so quick to offend and be offended; the capacity for either country to cross a critical line is growing rapidly.
Strategic difficulties between the US and China | LBC UK
Kevin Rudd discusses his new book The Avoidable War with Tom Swarbrick on LBC UK
What's Xi Jinping really thinking? Ask Kevin Rudd, ex-PM of Australia and fluent Mandarin speaker | The Telegraph
An ageing dictator, looking to his legacy, pushes the button on a long-planned invasion of a smaller neighbour. The fiction of an “international community” is quickly exposed: some countries barely bat an eyelid, preferring the economic rewards of a close relationship; others fear that anything beyond sanctions and stern words risks escalation – the story that this dictator has spent years telling his people, about their destiny and about himself, makes this conflict existential. This is Vladimir Putin and Ukraine in 2022. Could it be Xi Jinping and Taiwan a few years hence?
China views Russian invasion as a ‘strategic utility’, says ex-Australia PM | Financial Times
China will welcome a prolonged war in Ukraine as a “rolling strategic diversion” from its own assertiveness, according to former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd, and exploit a distracted west to focus on its competition with the US. Western nations have imposed economic sanctions on Russia and supplied Ukraine with weapons following President Vladimir Putin’s invasion in February. China has refused to condemn Russia’s belligerence, drawing accusations that Beijing supported Moscow’s invasion.