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Wang Xiangsui

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Chinese military writer (born 1954)
Wang Xiangsui
王湘穗
Director of the Center for Strategic Issues
In office
2012–Present
Personal details
BornOctober 1954 (age 70)
Guangzhou, China
Political partyChinese Communist Party
Alma materBeihang University
OccupationAuthor, Academic, Military Theorist
Military service
Branch/service People's Liberation Army Air Force
Years of service1970 - 2012
RankColonel (Retired)

Wang Xiangsui (王湘穗, born October 1, 1954) is a professor at Beihang University in Beijing, China and a retired senior Colonel in the People's Liberation Army. He is also a co-author of Unrestricted Warfare, a book which dictates that no country is capable of defeating a superpower, such as the United States, on its own terms. The book outlines steps that could weaken such superpowers, through unconventional means, including manipulation of banking systems, control of the media and natural resources.

Biography

Wang is a retired PLA colonel.

As of at least 2024, he is the director of the Centre for Strategic Research at Beihang University.

He along with Qiao Liang is the co-author of numerous books of military theory, the most prominent of which is Unrestricted Warfare which has influenced the strategic thinking of the People's Liberation Army as well as the United States in its policy towards China, Wang is also the author of numerous other books including: On the Quality of Officers, Exposition of the World's Military Powers, and Records of World Wars.

Views

Wang's research and writing focuses on military strategy.

In Unrestricted Warfare, Wang and Qiao write that no superpower has ever been defeated on its own terms. According to this view, those who wish to compete with superpowers must develop asymmetrical capabilities.

According to Wang, China's most important bilateral relationship is its relationship with Russia, and that "only when China and Russia become the United States' undefeatable opponents will they become its most respected friends."

Wang views Russia's invasion of Ukraine as advancing multi-polarity against United States hegemony. Wang describes Ukraine and Europe as having lost the most from the conflict. Wang contends that although the U.S. has profited financially from the war, it is appearing unreliable to its partners in the West.

Published Works

Xiangsui, Wang; Liang, Qiao (1 February 1999). Unrestricted Warfare (in Chinese). China: People's Liberation Army Arts and Literature Press. ISBN 9787540318871.

Xiangsui, Wang (1 April 2012). Catch up and Contain (in Chinese). China: Changjiang Literature and Art Publishing House. ISBN 9787535456113.

Xiangsui, Wang; Liang, Qiao (February 2017). On the Quality of Officers (in Chinese). China: Beijing Yangtze River New Century Corporation. ISBN 9787535456328.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)

See also

References

Scholia has an author profile for Wang Xiangsui.
  1. WANG Xiang Sui
  2. ^ "Introduction: The smart colonels". Asia Times. 27 March 2002. Archived from the original on 6 April 2002. Retrieved 27 May 2010.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. ^ Bachulska, Alicja; Leonard, Mark; Oertel, Janka (2 July 2024). The Idea of China: Chinese Thinkers on Power, Progress, and People (EPUB). Berlin, Germany: European Council on Foreign Relations. ISBN 978-1-916682-42-9. Archived from the original on 17 July 2024. Retrieved 22 July 2024.
  4. "王湘穗". mcrp.macrochina.com.cn. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
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