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The 2024 State of Southeast Asia Survey, by the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute, exposes an interesting disconnect — approximately half of the respondents favoured siding with China and half favoured the United States but showed greater trust in the United States. These findings reflect Southeast Asia's strategic challenge in managing the rise of China and escalating China–US rivalry, in addition to concerns about maintaining the rules-based order, liberal global trade and the rule of international law. This strategic dilemma is made more difficult by the rapidly changing geoeconomic landscape and emerging protectionism across the globe.