Commentary Contrary to popular belief, the United States and China are very much engaged in a new cold war. More worryingly, China appears to be winning. What can be done to address the growing threat from China? Is an all-out war inevitable? In a recent interview with The Associated Press, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on China and the United States to repair their “completely dysfunctional” relationship. A new cold war, he warned, must be avoided at all costs. In his maiden speech at the United Nations General Assembly, President Joe Biden, obviously aware of Guterres’ comments, declared that the United States was shifting from “relentless war” to “relentless diplomacy.” The United States, he stressed, was “not seeking a new cold war.” Although Biden doesn’t want a new cold war, the Chinese regime certainly does. After all, a cold war is “a state of political hostility between countries” typically characterized “by threats, propaganda, and other …