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China and Russia, as the world’s two leading authoritarian nations, will undoubtedly be critical for managing the most pressing traditional and non-traditional security challenges facing humanity, and can be expected to exert significant influence in shaping the future development of the twenty-first century geopolitical security order. China and Russia challenge United States hegemony and the Western liberal order by seeking a multipolar global power configuration more suited to their interests. Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin enjoy a close association, and both are strong nationalistic leaders determined to command respect on the world stage. Russia still maintains nuclear parity with the United States, and China rivals the United States as the world’s leading global economic power. China and Russia exercise considerable influence as permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, and share a coincidence of positions on several significant international issues in direct contradiction to the preferences and interests of Western democratic nations. Beijing and Moscow understand that the Sino–Russian partnership holds the potential to challenge the United States and its allies on global and regional issues. At the same time, both countries place high priority on relationships with Western democratic nations, but they insist that collaboration be based on “mutual respect” and “equality.”
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