This research examines the strategic triangle of China, Russia, and the United States, clarifying how Chinaâs rise and Russiaâs resurgence condition the U.S.âs strategic response within this interdependent triad. It posits that a âdual-containment paradoxâ where the U.S. is trying to contain both China and Russia concurrently, strengthens their alignment inadvertently, and intensifies competition. Chinaâs military and economic ascent challenge U.S. hegemony, while Russiaâs revisionist course exploits these tensions, fostering Sino-Russian collaboration in economic and diplomatic domains. The U.S. containment drives their convergence instead of isolating them, amplifying their counterweight to American hegemony. Strategic overextension and alliance fatigue plague the U.S., signaling dual containmentâs unsustainability. This suggests a pivot to focused engagement, managing rivalry without cementing an anti-U.S. bloc. In this triadic dynamic, multipolarity self-sustains: Chinaâs leverage, Russiaâs disruptions, and U.S. overreach thwart any single hegemon, yielding a global order of persistent yet bounded competition, where each powerâs moves reshape the triangleâs fragile balance.
Ali et al. (Wed,) studied this question.