How the United States Would Fight China

Breakfast book launch with Franz-Stefan Gady.

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Arguing that the United States is at real risk of strategic defeat in any war with China, Franz-Stefan Gady’s new book How the United States Would Fight China: The Risks of Pursuing a Rapid Victory dissects precisely how the United States imagines fighting the People's Republic of China, and why it risks failing.

Utilising his long experience in advising Western militaries about the future of warfare, Gady offers a vital analysis of one of the crucial questions shaping the ongoing superpower competition between US and Cina.

He contends that the US military approach to a potential conflict over Taiwan is unlikely to succeed, relying heavily on both rapidly established information superiority and a decisive victory. This may increase the threat of nuclear escalation between the world's only superpowers.

Franz-Stefan Gady has advised US and European militaries on structural reform and the future of high-intensity warfare. He is founder and chief executive officer of Gady Consulting.

Franz-Stefan is also a consulting senior fellow with the Institute for International Strategic Studies and an adjunct senior fellow with the Center for New American Security.

Can’t attend the book launch in person? We will be streaming from Litteraturhuset. Please tick the box for digital participation when you register.

Programme

  • 8.00–8.30 Light breakfast and mingling
  • 8.30–9.30 Book presentation by Franz-Stefan Gady
  • 9.30–10.00 Book discussion with Franz-Stefan Gady and Professor Henrik Stålhane Hiim, Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies (IFS). Moderator: Senior Fellow Bjørnar Sverdrup-Thygeson, IFS
  • 10.00–10.30 Q&A with the audience

The individual organizer is responsible for the event and text, obtaining photo permission, and photo credit. For questions about content, participants, or other details, please contact the organizer directly.


Do you want to rent Skram?

This event will take place in Skram. Skram is the second largest room at the House of Literature, located on the second floor.

Picture of the room Skram at Litteraturhuset with empty rows of chairs

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