One Belt One Road

Chinese Power Meets the World

Author:
In 2013, Chinese leader Xi Jinping announced a campaign for national rejuvenation. The One Belt One Road initiative, or OBOR, has become the largest infrastructure program in history. Nearly every Chinese province, city, major business, bank, and university have been mobilized to serve it, spending hundreds of billions of dollars overseas building ports and railroads, laying fiber cables, and launching satellites.

Using a trove of Chinese sources, author Eyck Freymann argues these infrastructure projects are a sideshow. OBOR is primarily a campaign to restore an ancient model in which foreign emissaries paid tribute to the Chinese emperor, offering gifts in exchange for political patronage. Xi sees himself as a sort of modern-day emperor, determined to restore China’s past greatness. Many experts assume that Xi’s nakedly neo-imperial scheme couldn’t possibly work. Freymann shows how wrong they are. China isn’t preying on victims, Freymann argues. It’s attracting willing partners—including Western allies—from Latin America to Southeast Asia to the Persian Gulf. Even in countries where OBOR megaprojects fail, Freymann finds that political leaders still want closer ties with China.

Freymann tells the monumental story of Xi’s project on the global stage. Drawing on primary documents in five languages, interviews with senior officials, and on-the-ground case studies from Malaysia to Greece, Russia to Iran, Freymann pulls back the veil of propaganda about OBOR, giving readers a page-turning world tour of the burgeoning Chinese empire, a guide for understanding China’s motives and tactics, and clear recommendations for how the West can compete.

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E-Book (PDF)
Preliminary Material
Pages: i–xx
Introduction
Pages: 1–6
What Is OBOR?
Pages: 7–20
Origins
OBOR’s Many Fathers
Pages: 21–43
Emperor Xi
Making the Past Serve the Present
Pages: 44–68
The Emperor’s New Brand
Promoting OBOR at Home and Abroad
Pages: 69–91
Strategic Promiscuity
Sri Lanka Flirts with OBOR
Pages: 93–129
The Skeptical Bulldozer
Tanzania Turns Away
Pages: 130–159
The Eagle’s Nest
China Prevails in Greece
Pages: 160–192
OBOR Shapes Four Regions
Pages: 193–229
How Should the West Respond?
Pages: 230–243
Selected Reading
Pages: 250–259
Notes
Pages: 263–286
Bibliography
Pages: 287–320
Index
Pages: 321–333
Eyck Freymann is a doctoral candidate at the University of Oxford.
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