New Cold War at Sea

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A01=Lyle Goldstein
A01=Lyle J. Goldstein
A01=Vitaly Kozyrev
anti-U.S. coalition
Arctic naval competition
Arctic sea routes
Author_Lyle Goldstein
Author_Lyle J. Goldstein
Author_Vitaly Kozyrev
autonomous naval systems
blue water navy growth
carrier modernization China
Category=JWCK
Category=NHF
Category=NHQ
Category=NHW
China
China Russia alliance
Chinese naval modernization
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Eurasian naval partnership
future naval operations
geopolitics
global sea power shift
global security
Great Power Competition
Indo-Pacific military balance
Indo-Pacific security
Japan security concerns
maritime competition
maritime geopolitics
maritime grand strategy
maritime multipolar order
maritime strategy
maritime trade warfare
military change
missile technology transfer
naval arms race
naval deterrence strategy
naval power politics
naval statecraft
naval strategic cooperation
navy advancement
Pacific fleet rivalry
Philippines defense ties
PLA Navy expansion
power and influence
Russia
Russian naval strategy
Russian Navy
sea control competition
Sea Power
submarine cooperation
twenty-first century naval warfare
U.S. naval supremacy
U.S.-China rivalry

Product details

  • ISBN 9781682479940
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: Naval Institute Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The New Cold War at Sea exposes the growing maritime partnership between China and Russia, revealing how their increasingly coordinated naval strategies—from the Arctic to the Pacific—might threaten U.S. maritime dominance. Drawing on rare Russian and Mandarin sources, the authors offer a timely, eye-opening look at the potential global shift in sea power.

In early 2025 the Chinese and Russian fleets conducted the third in a series of trilateral naval exercises with Iran. Just prior, the Chinese Coast Guard, operating alongside the Russian Coast Guard, entered the Arctic for the first time. This China-Russia quasi-alliance is reshaping the global naval power balance, challenging U.S. naval supremacy through close and continuing collaboration. Russian assistance has propelled China’s aircraft carrier program, modernized its destroyers and submarines, and delivered world-leading missiles and autonomous vehicles, posing a threat to U.S. allies such as Japan and the Philippines. The maritime implications of this alliance extend beyond the Indo-Pacific, touching all the world’s oceans.

The New Cold War at Sea reveals crucial, generally unknown details of China-Russia maritime cooperation, from the Arctic to Southeast Asia, to Africa, and to Latin America. Based on a wealth of underutilized Mandarin and Russian-language sources, authors Lyle J. Goldstein and Vitaly A. Kozyrev provide an objective assessment of Chinese and Russian maritime symbiosis. By presenting unique evidence relating to the naval global balance as well as related policy proposals, the book aims to spark a vital national debate over the future of American maritime strategy in the emergent multipolar world. 
 

Lyle J. Goldstein is a national security specialist focusing on China and Russia. At the U.S. Naval War College, he served as the founding director of the China Maritime Studies Institute and earned the Superior Civilian Service Award. He leads the China Initiative at Brown University and directs Asia studies for Defense Priorities. 

Vitaly A. Kozyrev is a USSR–born sinologist—now a naturalized American citizen—who has served on the faculty of a number of institutions of higher education in the United States, China, and Russia. He is a Distinguished Professor of Political Science and International Studies at Endicott College, Beverly, Massachusetts. For the past two decades he has explored the history of U.S.-China-Russia relations, China’s economic modernization, energy security in Eurasia, East Asian regionalism, and conflicts in the Asia-Pacific region.  
 




 

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