"Sino-Russian relations are closer than they have been at any time in the past fifty years, giving them the chance to reshape the global order to their liking," Mathew Burrows and Robert A. Manning wrote for the National Interest.
Gone are the times when Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger managed to drive a wedge between Russia and China. At the moment both countries appear to be natural born allies, reaping the fruits of cooperation, facing similar challenges and interested in finding mutually beneficial solutions under the framework of a multipolar world.
The successful partnership between Russia and China is bound to attract attention of other Eurasian countries, as well as in Africa and Latin America.
"Yes, there's a new Great Game afoot, but we're being seriously outplayed," Burrows and Manning observed in an article titled "America's Worst Nightmare: Russia and China Are Getting Closer."