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The United States Should Give China Breathing Room to Rise Peacefully

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The United States Should Give China Breathing Room to Rise Peacefully | Ivan Eland

As President Obama visited China, he insisted that the United States welcomed China's rise and wanted that country to play a bigger role in regional and global affairs; but that rhetoric is largely hokum. The United States has been either the premier superpower or the only superpower in the world since World War II, exercising an outsize role in global and East Asian Affairs. In world history, many times rising powers have had tensions or conflict with status quo or declining powers, because the latter resist a more equal relationship with the new "upstart." America is no exception.

Xi Jinping, China's leader, has recently spoken of a "new type of great power relations" with the United States. This is diplomatic speak for China wanting its own sphere of influence in East Asia -- much as other great powers have had a security buffer in the past. The American foreign policy elite self-servingly dismiss this Chinese desire as "so 19th century"; of course, they would howl if any country tried to encroach on the U.S. spheres of influence Europe (why the United States is very nervous about Russian activities in Ukraine) and Latin America (traditionally enforced vigorously with the Monroe Doctrine).

In East Asia, a similar situation exists. The United States has a far forward security position -- the Chinese would likely call it a neo-imperial containment policy of China -- using formal or informal bilateral military alliances left over from the Cold War (with Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, the Philippines, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan); a forward naval presence based out of Japan, Guam, and Hawaii; and U.S. troops stationed in Japan, South Korea, and Australia. Furthermore, the United States is negotiating an ambitious pan-Asian free trade agreement leaving out China. Lastly, the United States is discouraging its allies from entering into an Asian development bank run by China.

If all of this doesn't strike an objective observer as fulfilling Obama's welcoming rhetoric, that should be no surprise. Great powers regularly issue friendly pronouncements and then coldly act in what they perceive to be their own interests.

Yet the United States really should back off a bit and let China have a security buffer. No reason exists that both powers cannot live together peacefully, given the broad Pacific Ocean moat that separates them. They are not like France and Germany, powers with a contentious common border in the late 19th and first half of the 20th century, but more like the United States and Britain, which allowed its breakaway rogue colony to rise peacefully primarily because of the broad Atlantic Ocean buffer between them.

An even bigger reason exists today for the United States to let China peacefully expand its sphere of influence than existed in the late 19th when Britain tolerated the rise of the United States: Both China and the United States are already nuclear powers. Would the United States really want to sacrifice its cities in an atomic conflagration if one of China's minor border disputes with East Asian neighbors, some of which are U.S. allies, exploded into war, and then went nuclear? The dirty little secret is that the U.S. public is being endangered to defend wealthy East Asian allies that should spend more money on their own security and could band together to be the first line of defense against a rising China. However, none of these allies has any incentive to spend more on their defenses while under the shield of U.S. conventional and nuclear forces. Essentially, the ridiculous situation has arisen whereby China loans the United States the money to help other wealthy countries defend themselves against... well, China.

Yet, in the future, the United States won't possess the relative resources needed to contain China, as it did when it contained the Soviet Union during the Cold War. The sclerotic communist economy of the USSR was never more than half the size of the U.S. GDP. As China's rapidly growing economy becomes equal to or exceeds that of the United States, continuing the containment policy will become ever more costly and could strain even the large U.S. economy. The sluggish economic growth that the United States has been experiencing has been induced by the already huge $18 Trillion public debt, a significant portion of which is attributable to U.S. wars and other unneeded efforts to act as the world's neo-imperial policemen, including in East Asia.

More positively, the huge intertwining of the Chinese and American economies via trade, investment, and lending probably acts as somewhat of a brake against conflict between the two countries -- note President George W. Bush's apology during the episode in 2001 of a Chinese fighter jet buzzing and damaging a U.S. reconnaissance plane in international waters -- that wasn't there during the Cold War with the Soviet Union. Nonetheless, the United States should rethink its forward-based military presence that is designed essentially to quarantine China and prevent this great power from creating a sphere of influence for its own security. The Chinese may be authoritarians and the Americans may be more pluralistic, but China does have legitimate security concerns, and the U.S. military is in China's face, not vice versa. A pull back of all U.S. forces to Hawaii and Guam would give China some breathing room and reduce the danger of a dangerous confrontation between two nuclear-armed powers.
 
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As if China needed any favor from the US.

What a hypothetical proposition!

What if China gave the US a bit breathing room and stop forcing them doing foolish mistakes?

What if China gave the US some breathing room in Ukraine and Syria?

No such favor is given. No such favor is asked for.
 
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Washington can’t make rules alone any more

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Illustration: Liu Rui/GT

Even the most creative novelist wouldn't be able to devise a story about how a free trade zone could really work out or even survive in the Asia-Pacific region without China's participation. The just concluded APEC forum met with expected success, endorsing the necessity of building a free trade system in the Asia-Pacific, which is in line with the trend of the regional development. The US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which is still under discussion, cannot shield itself from the process either.

So far, TPP negotiations have included 12 countries in the Asia-Pacific. China is the biggest trading partner of eight of them, namely Singapore, Peru, New Zealand, Chile, Japan, Vietnam, Malaysia and Australia. As for the US, Mexico and Canada, China ranks second in their lists of trading partners.

The reality is that China has already outdone the US in trade volume with almost every other APEC member, including New Zealand, Singapore, Chile and Brunei, the four founders of the TPP.

In these circumstances, Washington still cherishes the wishful thinking that it is able to hammer out a US and Japan-led free trade system by means of the TPP as the framework, by which they can bend China's will to their wishes so that it will follow their lead after joining the system.

On November 7, The New York Times published an article titled "Who decides Pacific trade?" by Dennis C. Blair, the former commander-in-chief of the US Pacific Command. The author thinks that TPP negotiations should be concluded as soon as possible instead of both the US and Japan being fettered by endless discussions on trivial issues. As the author writes, "a TPP agreement will establish American-Japanese leadership in setting a course that will enable greater prosperity throughout the Asia-Pacific region."

This point of view does not lack supporters in the US. It suggests that only by reinforcing the US-Japan alliance can a new system to counterbalance China's rise be brought out. It also sends a warning that once China gains an upper hand in the Asia-Pacific region as an agenda-setter, the US will be forced to give up its conventional political criteria, which is the last thing Washington wants to do.

The major concern that drives the US to turn its back on the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) is that it fears Beijing will set new rules to make loans to other regional countries so as to impose more political influence on the region.

On surface, the AIIB has triggered a competition for regional leadership, but in essence, it offers a new vision that can better suit the future development of most Asian countries, which is the reason why China is dedicated to advancing this project.

The emerging economies represented by China have rendered many rules obsolete. The new rule-making process has created an unprecedented foundation for Asia-Pacific countries to conduct cooperation.

The new system needs adjustments, and the old one should be reformed. Asia will not find a way to go back, so the US should adapt to the new changes, sitting at a table with China to discuss how to build a new future for this region.

A sensible choice the US can make is to be more actively engaged in cooperation with emerging economies, such as in the projects proposed by China, especially in terms of the rule-setting of business and trade.

The facts have shown that rules which are made without China's participation will not end up well. Some 30 years ago, the US might be able to make them work, but now, it's very unlikely to do that.

The author is a senior editor with People's Daily. He is now stationed in Brazil. dinggang@globaltimes.com.cn. Follow him on Twitter at @dinggangchina
 
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We would, but those duds have no potential. It would be like watching dogs chase their tail. If anything, the more merciful thing to do would be to put them out of their misery.

china can breath and bark in this Room if china continoune collect paper printed by FED to funding to US army activities in the world, when China bite, the Room is closed.
 
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It's funny and sounds like that US can't do anything more to contain China.
 
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china can breath and bark in this Room if china continoune collect paper printed by FED to funding to US army activities in the world, when China bite, the Room is closed.
Funny because Vietcong government is begging for a lot of these printed US paper to be in vietnam
 
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It's funny and sounds like that US can't do anything more to contain China.

No its stating the U.S. should not contain China and give it some breathing room to expand to other parts of Asia.
 
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