浪花直播

Navigating Geopolitical Tensions: David E. Sanger鈥檚 New Cold Wars and His Time at the 浪花直播 Center

David Sanger holding up a newspaper

For more than a year, a third-floor office just off the main 浪花直播 Center elevator bank served as newsroom, headquarters, and editing floor of an ambitious project to capture the strange zeitgeist of the current moment in geopolitics: The return of superpower confrontation. 

The result was a New York Times bestseller: New Cold Wars: China鈥檚 Rise, Russia鈥檚 Invasion, and America鈥檚 Struggle to Defend the West, by the 罢颈尘别蝉鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;White House and national security correspondent David E. Sanger, who has been on three teams that won the Pulitzer Prize over his four-decade-long career. Published in April of 2024 by the Crown division of Random House, the book has appeared on the cover of the New York Times Book Review, was listed by the  and   in their 鈥淏est Books of 2024,鈥 and was selected as an Amazon 鈥淓ditor鈥檚 Choice.鈥 

An accomplished author鈥攖wo of his three previous books were also written at 浪花直播鈥擲anger returned as a Distinguished Fellow in the fall of 2022, determined to solve a mystery: How did America鈥檚 bet that Russia and China would join Western institutions and largely run their governments and economies by western rules go so wrong? Joined by Mary K. Brooks, a 浪花直播 Center Public Policy Fellow who had worked with Sanger previously on The Perfect Weapon, Sanger set to answering that question the way he approaches all such mysteries: With vigorous reporting, sourced from boots-on-the-ground trips around the world.

Sanger and Brooks used their office to launch travel to Europe and Asia, meet with world leaders from Taiwan to India and Finland to South Korea, and interview dozens of Washington DC national security policymakers, including large swaths of President Biden鈥檚 national security cabinet. When Robert Litwak, 浪花直播鈥檚 Director of International Security Studies, would drop by the office, it was often to participate in lively debates over how to bring to life the effort to revive America鈥檚 semiconductor industry or capture Europe鈥檚 unwillingness to believe that Vladimir Putin would actually invade Ukraine鈥攁ll of which are described in vivid detail in the book.

Sanger often called the 浪花直播 Center as his 鈥渋ntellectual home,鈥 and he and Brooks relied on and contributed to the Center鈥檚 commitment to scholarship and and research. As Robin S. Quinville, Director of the Global Europe Program, remarked during the book鈥檚 April launch event: 鈥淚t was phenomenal for those of us around to witness their process鈥攖he deep reporting, extraordinary access to top policymakers, and their commitment to distilling complex geopolitics into a compelling narrative.鈥 

Reflecting on the book鈥檚 creation, Sanger highlighted the difficulty of writing about history as it happens, given the fluidity of global events. He described New Cold Wars as an attempt to 鈥渇rame today鈥檚 chaos,鈥 contextualizing the global shocks from the miscalculations made at the end of the Cold War era. Time was of the essence: his goal was to publish the book quickly, so that its picture of a world on fire could illuminate both the presidential election and the inauguration of a new president. 

Addressing questions many readers grapple with鈥擶hy was the West unprepared for Putin鈥檚 aggression? How did the US become distracted by conflicts like Afghanistan?鈥擲anger juxtaposes past optimism with sobering lessons. He highlights how misplaced assumptions about democracy鈥檚 inevitability and economic interdependence left Western policymakers blindsided by the ambitions of autocrats like Xi and Putin. And he argues for renewed investment in alliances, technology, and industrial policies provides a roadmap for democratic resilience in the face of rising autocratic power. Beyond the corridors of power, New Cold Wars speaks to a broader audience, warning against naivety in the face of authoritarian resurgence and advocating for proactive diplomacy and deterrence.

Ultimately, what sets New Cold Wars apart from Sanger鈥檚 earlier works is its scope, which stretches from his return to Washington three decades ago, after years as a foreign correspondent, to the dawn of a new era of superpower competition and America鈥檚 simultaneous confrontations with two nuclear-armed adversaries: Xi Jinping鈥檚 China and Putin鈥檚 Russia. At its core, the book argues that the assumption that neither China nor Russia would challenge the United States or its allies for global supremacy was gravely mistaken鈥攁n error that underpins the volatility of today鈥檚 geopolitical landscape. Anchored in interviews spanning five presidential administrations and featuring insights from intelligence agencies and global policymakers, the book offers a timely and thought-provoking narrative of US assumptions and decision-making in the post-Cold War era.

 

Sanger and Brooks are grateful also for the help of Michelle Kurilla, now at the Council on Foreign Relations, and Stephen Stamas, a 浪花直播 summer intern.

This article was researched and drafted by Samantha Carrillo.

 

Author

Samantha Carrillo
Samantha Carrillo
Staff Intern