Unrequited obsession
I enjoyed the lively debate on whether China is an enemy of the west, in which both Jonathan Eyal and Anatol Lieven made some excellent points (“The Duel,” October).
One thought occurred: the issue of how far a reversed version of the question makes sense in China today. It makes sense, but not as something that detains most ordinary people for long.
There is of course an increasing level of nationalism in China that makes the west its key target. However, if you ask middle-class Chinese people what their most pressing concerns are, they might include the difficulty of paying for mortgages (China has a very high property ownership rate); the high cost, financial and psychological, of intense educational aspiration for their children; and the economic damage caused by the pandemic. All these will sound very familiar to any westerner.