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THE
STRUGGLE FOR HARMONY
Part 1: Myths and realities about China
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part 2: Imagined danger
This article appeared in AToL on June 14, 2003
In East Asia, Aaron L Friedberg, who recently joined US Vice President
Dick Cheney's staff as a deputy national security advisor and director
of policy planning, thinks that China may seek to execute the
diplomatic equivalent of a pincer movement, applying pressure from the
north (the Korean Peninsula) and the south (the South China Sea) in
order to gain its primary objectives at the center: reunification with
Taiwan and the neutralization of Japan.
After the success of
an initial gambit in the spring of 2000, the Chinese will probably
continue to press North Korea to negotiate with the South, while at the
same time attempting to build themselves up as the indispensable
intermediary. In return for its continued help in delivering North
Korea, China may hope to gain some assurances from South Korea about
the role of the United States on the peninsula. Even if Chinese
strategists cannot extract much in the way of concrete promises, they
may nevertheless come to believe that progress toward reunification of
Korea will unleash popular forces in the South that will lead
irresistibly to a US withdrawal. Continued improvement in North-South
relations would also help to lull Japan and undermine US efforts to
build support for theater missile defenses in Korea.
Yet recent events
seem to suggest that Friedberg's scenario of a Chinese threat appears
to be precisely what US official policy is moving toward in its dealing
with North Korea, particularly US dependence on China to help resolve
the Korean nuclear crisis. The final outcome may well be the
denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and a phased reduction of US
troops in Korea. Already the US is pulling troops out of the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) to farther south where they would be out of
North Korean artillery range.
In his November 2000
article in the neo-conservative magazine Commentary, "The Struggle for
Mastery in Asia" - a play on the title of a book by British historian A
J P Taylor - Friedberg suggested that while these events are unfolding,
the People's Republic of China (PRC) will use a variety of tactics to
aid the further extension of its influence in Southeast Asia. Here, in
contrast to its role as peacemaker in Korea, it may show a harder,
tougher face. An increase in piracy (Friedberg suggests perhaps
supported covertly by China - a conspiracy theory totally off the deep
end) could provide the justification for an expansion of naval
activities in the South China Sea, enabling the PRC to assert its
territorial claims in the area. Yet China's approach to territorial
dispute has been conciliatory and based on the principle of fair
sharing of mineral rights among the parties of dispute.
Friedberg suggests
that China might support ethnic and religious separatist movements in
Indonesia and the Philippines in the hope that, if these countries
become racked by civil unrest, they will be much less capable of acting
to oppose the growth in Chinese power. Such a suggestion is pure
fishing in troubled waters. Recent history has shown that Chinese
ethnic groups in Southeast Asia have suffered state persecution in the
name of Cold War anti-communism at US urgings and approval.
Friedberg also
thinks that after years of tolerating Singapore's military cooperation
with the United States, China might begin to press that country to
choose sides or, at the very least, abandon its tilt toward the US. Yet
Singapore's increasingly contentious problem with the United States
comes from US moral imperialistic intolerance on Singapore's Confucian
governance.
Friedberg thinks
that if Chinese leaders feel the need to flex their muscles, and
perhaps also to demonstrate the limits of US power and commitment, they
might pick a fight they think they can win, most likely by provoking
and then pummeling Vietnam in what their military planners have called
a quick "local war with high-tech characteristics". Friedberg should be
reminded that China's 1980 punitive incursion into Vietnam did not fare
too well.
Friedberg feels that
the consolidation of China's position to its north and south will set
the stage for the final resolution of the core strategic issues of
Japan and Taiwan. With regard to Japan, China's goal must be to detach
it from the United States without at the same time stimulating a
resurgence of Japanese assertiveness and militarism. Despite their
oft-expressed fears, Chinese strategists may become less worried about
Japan as the country's population ages, its political system continues
to founder, and its economy fails to regain its former luster. A Korean
settlement that results in a greatly reduced US role on the peninsula
could yield a corresponding increase in Japanese discomfort at being
the last major remaining outpost of US military power in Asia. If so,
the moment may have arrived for China to offer Japan some kind of
"grand bargain", perhaps involving a mutual non-aggression pact and a
pledge to maintain freedom of navigation in the South China Sea in
exchange for a sharp curtailment or outright abrogation of the US-Japan
alliance. At this point, if not before, Taiwan would have little choice
but to accept the PRC's terms for reunification.
By placing Japan and
Taiwan in the same security category, Friedberg blinds himself from any
insight with which to turn what he sees as a struggle for mastery to a
struggle for harmony in Asia. If the United States ceases and desists
in interfering in China's internal affairs with its posture on Taiwan,
most of what Friedberg envisages as an inevitable struggle for mastery
in Asia between the US and China would become manageable.
Friedberg calculates
that if the PRC is impatient, if it underestimates the impact of its
action on its opponents, if it is excessively high-handed or overly
brutal, it could well wind up stimulating precisely the kind of
determined, unified response that could foil its plans and blocks its
ambitions. On this score, he has nothing to worry about. Chinese
leaders has been nothing but patient. They took almost five decades
after coming to power before they took back Hong Kong from British
colonialism. Even then they allow Hong Kong autonomous rule with a
capitalist system for another 50 years. On Taiwan, Chinese leaders have
repeatedly said it may take 50 years to achieve peaceful reunification,
provided Taiwan independence remains a forbidden possibility.
Friedberg suggests
it is conceivable that China will mellow with the passage of time, or
suffer from domestic weaknesses that will prevent if from pursuing its
objectives in a consistent and effective way. And most important of
all, the United States could either adjust its current policies so as
to make an open Sino-US confrontation less likely or, if conflict
cannot be avoided, prepare for its eventuality while simultaneously
preserving America's own position in Asia.
Friedberg purposely
refrained from dwelling on US strategic options in the coming decades,
not because he thinks the United States is without economic, military,
or political policy options. Rather, he thinks it is because the first
order of business is to see the situation plainly. Yet Friedberg's view
is that nations have more to gain by resorting to obsolete struggle for
mastery rather than harmony, that US-PRC strategic competition,
allegedly already under way, could not be redirected toward strategic
partnership for the world's benefit. To sow more paranoia among US
policymakers, Friedberg claims that in recognizing these dark
realities, the Chinese are well ahead of the United States.
Friedberg is the
author of In
the Shadow of the Garrison State, in which he argues
that anti-statist inclinations prevented Cold War anxieties from
transforming the United States into the garrison state it might have
become in their absence. He concludes that the "weakness" of the
American state served as a profound source of national strength that
allowed the United States to outperform and outlast its supremely
centralized and statist rival: the Soviet Union.
Friedberg offers an
analysis of the challenges facing the United States in Asia. He thinks
the PRC will emerge as the major threat to US interests there and will
become, implicitly, the focal point of US strategy not only in the
region but in the world. As an analyst with a long-range perspective,
Friedberg plays down the huge disparity in power between the United
States and China, a gap likely to continue in the foreseeable future.
He sees hostile strategic competition as inevitable between the two
nations.
This is
understandable for an American analyst to whom Spencerian Social
Darwinism forms a pathological basis for a world view in which hostile
political competition is considered as natural between nations. Yet the
history of China's foreign relations cannot be fully understood within
the context of Western political thought. True, for the past century
and a half, China has been a victim of intrusive Western imperialism
and its modern history has been one of combating Western imperialism to
restore mastery of its own fate. But the idea that a strong and
prosperous China would also take on imperialistic intentions is an
exclusively Western notion. Napoleon Bonaparte, who thought war was the
purpose of civilization, was reported to have warned that China was a
sleeping giant that would be much feared by the world if awakened. Yet
there is little in Chinese history that would support the thesis that a
strong China would be an imperialistic China.
Between 1405 and
1433, a period when China possessed the world's most advanced seafaring
technology, the navigator/sailor Zheng He explored the seas not for
imperialistic expansion but to satisfy the Ming Court's demand for
exotic commodities from distant lands. Zheng even brought back from
Africa giraffes, ostriches and zebras. But the Ming Court abruptly
stopped Chinese navigational adventure in 1433, after the death of
Zheng. This history baffles Western observers, whose later experience
in the West associates navigational adventure with empire-building.
Zheng He, a Muslim
Chinese, was born as Ma He in 1371 to a poor ethnic Hui (Chinese
Muslim) family in Yunnan province, southwestern China. His grandfather
and father once made an overland pilgrimage to Mecca. Zheng sailed
throughout the Indian Ocean, retracing some of the same routes taken by
Ibn Battuta, the Arabic geographer, whose historic visit to China in
1346 during the Mongol Yuan Dynasty appeared in court records. Zheng
went to East Africa, Mecca, the Persian Gulf, and throughout the Indian
Ocean decades before Christopher Columbus sailed for America in 1492
and Vasco da Gama made his first voyage to India in 1497.
For 28 years
(1405-33), Zheng commanded seven fleets that visited 37 countries,
through Southeast Asia to faraway Africa and Arabia. In 1420 the Ming
navy dwarfed the combined navies of Europe. A great fleet of big ships,
with nine masts and manned by 500 men each, set sail in July 1405,
almost a century before Columbus's voyage to America. There were great
treasure ships more than 90 meters long and 45m wide, the biggest being
134m long and 57m across, capable of carrying 1,000 passengers.
Columbus's Santa Maria was only 26m long. Most of the ships were built
at the Dragon Bay shipyard near Nanjing, the remains of which can still
be seen today.
Zheng He's first
fleet included 27,870 men on 317 ships, including sailors, clerks,
interpreters, artisans, medical men and meteorologists, but only a
small number of soldiers. On board were large quantities of cargo
including silk goods, porcelain, gold and silverware, copper utensils,
iron implements and cotton goods and books. The fleet sailed along
China's coast to Champa close to Vietnam and, after crossing the South
China Sea, visited Java and Sumatra and reached Sri Lanka by passing
through the Strait of Malacca. On the way back it sailed along the west
coast of India and returned home in 1407. Envoys from Calcutta in India
and several countries in Asia and the Middle East also boarded the
ships to pay visits to China. Zheng He's second and third voyages taken
shortly after followed roughly the same route.
In the autumn of
1413, Zheng He set out with 30,000 men to Arabia on his fourth and most
ambitious voyage. From Hormuz he coasted around the Arabian boot to
Aden at the mouth of the Red Sea. The arrival of the fleet caused a
sensation in the region, and 19 countries sent ambassadors to board
Zheng's ships with gifts for Emperor Yong Le. In 1417, after two years
in Nanjing and touring other cities, the visiting foreign envoys were
escorted home by Zheng. On this trip, he sailed down the east coast of
Africa, stopping at Mogadishu, Matindi, Mombassa and Zanzibar and may
have reached Mozambique. The sixth voyage in 1421 also went to the
African coast. Loaded with Chinese silk and porcelain, the junks
visited ports around the Indian Ocean. Here, Arab and African merchants
exchanged spices, ivory, medicines, rare woods, and pearls so eagerly
sought by the Chinese imperial court. Zheng He died in the 10th year of
the reign of the Ming Emperor Xuande (1433) and was buried in the
southern outskirts of Bull's Head Hill (Niushou) in Nanjing. Inscribed
on top of the tomb are the Arabic words "Allahu Akbar" ("God is Great").
Unlike Columbus and Vasco de Gama, Zheng He did not found any colonies
for a Chinese empire.
China never had an
empire structure in the Western concept of the term as exemplified by
the Roman Empire or the British Empire. Chinese territorial expansion
was more along the line of the European Union, where the eager
peripheral aspired to join a reluctant center for obvious benefits.
Much of the historical expansion of China took place when China was
under foreign occupation, such as the Mongolian Yuan Dynasty and the
Manchurian Qing Dynasty. The ruling dynastic houses of foreign origin
were inevitably assimilated into Chinese culture, much like the way the
House of Windsor in Britain adopted British culture. In this respect,
the Chinese Empire was different than the Austro-Hungarian Empire in
which the diverse population was never homogenized and the ruling house
remained exclusively Germanic in both ethnicity and culture. Nor was it
similar to the British Empire, for the same reason. Whenever China was
strong and prosperous in history, Chinese foreign policy tended to be
isolationist, fending off intruders, rather than expansionist for
conquest. Whenever China was weak and poor, foreign partition plots
took the form of thinly disguised separatism movements.
Friedberg touts the
George Schultz line of viewing Japan as central to US policy in Asia.
Unlike Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, whose balance-of-power
realpolitik world view focused on China along the line of Franklin D
Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan and Schultz favored Japan in anticipation of a
future conflict between that country and China. They point to postwar
history when the US sided with China until 1949, and with Japan
thereafter, yielding dramatically preferable results from the US
perspective. Of course, they ignore the argument that less paranoia in
US policy toward communism in Asia, and in China particularly, would
have yielded very different and preferable outcomes. After all,
Friedberg himself built his academic reputation by developing the theme
that the absence of a garrison-state mentality in the United States was
largely responsible for its ultimate success in the Cold War. By the
same logic, if the US had not so relentlessly imposed a garrison-state
mentality in global communism, it might have led to the success of
socialism in much of the world and would have contributed positively to
the security of the US.
Friedberg believes
that China can intimidate Japan, forcing it to be cooperative or at
least neutral toward China. Yet he does not explain why this should be
such a danger to the United States. US policy aims at rearming Japan
against China. But this is a double-edged sword. In the triangular
economic relationship, there is more fundamental trade conflict between
Japan and the US than between Japan and China or the US and China. In
fact, Japan and the US are competing headlong to build bilateral trade
relations with China at the other's expense. During his first visit to
China as secretary of state after replacing Al Haig, Schultz dismissed
complaints from US executives in Shanghai that Washington did not
provide comparable support for US businesses in China as Japan did for
its corporations, by telling them to move to Japan if they did not like
US policy on China.
Postwar China has
not been acting in its own best interest with its fixation on
historical Japanese militarism. With China evolving as a legitimate
power, Japanese military revival will find US dominance in Asia a more
ready target. Japan has more to settle with the United States, which
defeated this proud rising nation, occupied it and dominated it for
half a century. The US torpedoed Japan's East Asia Co-Prosperity Ring.
Japan's historical relationship with China is one of apologetic guilt
while its national psyche toward the US is one of latent contempt, a
sentiment narcissistic Americans find easy to overlook.
There is a
preponderance of objective basis for symbiotic cooperation between
Japan and China. Japanese attitude toward China's semi-colonial status
under Western imperialism had much to do with its aggression toward
China. From Japan's point of view, it was merely fulfilling its destiny
as a modern power and claiming its share in the de facto partition of a
weak, decrepit China. Japan's World War II aggression is Asia was based
on a Western imperialist model that Japan adopted beginning with the
Meiji Restoration. Once China threw off the yoke of Western
imperialism, Japan restored its historical respect for China as its
cultural fountainhead. The logic for symbiotic cooperation between
China and Japan is so strong and obvious and the cultural affinity
between the two nations so pervasive and natural that only US
self-indulgence would support any fantasy that Japan is a natural ally
of the United States. Japan is not Britain. The future of Asia will be
determined in Northeast Asia, where power is concentrated, not in South
and Southeast Asia, where Friedberg has assigned excessive weight. It
certainly will not be determined in Washington. Taiwan is an issue
entirely manufactured by US policy. Friedberg rightly sees Taiwan as a
possible fuse for US-China conflict. The United States hopes that a
pro-Japan foreign policy can strengthen US capabilities in its
potential military confrontation with China over Taiwan. Yet Japan may
take a similar position as Turkey, which refused the use of US bases in
Turkey to open a northern front in the renewed Iraq War, or the
position on US bases taken by Saudi Arabia. Japan will reinforce its
insistence that US bases in Japan be use only to defend Japan proper,
and not for supporting or expanding US interests in Asia.
Part of the
blow-back of economic globalization is the divergence of the interest
of US-based multinational corporations and financial institutions from
US national interest and foreign-policy objectives put forth by US
statism. Whereas the state apparatus of the United States sees
globalization in terms of geopolitical power politics, the private
sector is working hard to purge its globalization efforts of a
neo-imperialistic tinge. US-based multinationals see Washington as
obstructionist in free trade, not much different from any other foreign
government pursuing economic nationalism. From IBM to GM, from
CitiGroup to Loral Space and Communications, a hostile view toward US
high-tech sanction toward any country, particularly China, and a benign
view of China as a huge market dominate. To the private sector, huge
market exceptionism is basic gospel. For neo-liberals, trade is a
weapon to disarm potential enemies, not the denial of trade. Further,
the current neo-con cooption of US foreign policy may well be a merely
temporary distortion of traditional US values. The Bush administration
came to power through a contested narrow victory decided by the
judiciary. There is much evidence that this is a government that
represents a minority extremist position taking advantage of a new
paranoia generated by the attacks of September 11.
Friedberg overstates
China's economic challenge to the United States. China has committed
itself to participate in globalization and worked overtime to prepare
for and accommodate membership in the World Trade Organization. China's
trade surplus with the US is in fact strengthening the dollar economy
at the expense of the yuan economy, a fact of dollar hegemony that
Chinese economists have been slow to understand. A sudden halt in
US-China trade would adversely impact the US more severely than China.
It might produce the salutary effect of forcing China to focus more on
domestic development through state credit rather than through foreign
capital and to shift from its excessive dependence of export.
Friedberg's understanding of international economics is less than
profound.
A war with China
will not remain a regional war. The painful lessons of the Korean and
the Vietnam Wars have not been forgotten by the US military, yet a war
with China may be put an end to the post-Cold War Pax Americana.
Timing is crucial in
military balance. China's technological capacity is advancing, but
Beijing has other priorities and is not investing heavily in its
military. It has far to go to realize most of the capabilities
Friedberg postulates - except in the realm of missiles. There, China
has long been able to strike the US with nuclear weapons and can easily
offset the proposed NMD system.
Friedberg also
correctly observes that Chinese missile tests in the Taiwan Strait in
1995-96 heightened the perceived threat posed by missiles with
non-nuclear warheads. Because of the short distances involved (90
miles), China has many technical options, and it is unclear that
Taiwan's acquisition of TMD would be very effective against them.
Friedberg sees an opening for arms control to deal with this problem.
An agreement by Taiwan not to deploy missile defenses if the mainland
restricts the number of missiles deployed against it might be backed up
by an ability (with US help) to put such defenses quickly in place. Yet
the three communiques that form the basis of US-China rapprochement
already include arms-reduction clauses for Taiwan, which the United
States has not observed in recent years.
According to
Lawrence Korb, formerly assistant secretary of defense in the Reagan
administration, the United States should understand that Beijing's
ambition to build a powerful military to complement its growing economy
and strategic positions in Asia is not necessarily to America's
detriment. In an article in Insight magazine in 2000, he wrote: "China
remains and will remain too weak to challenge US power even in its own
neighborhood. Consider the gap between China's acknowledged $20 billion
defense budget (or even the estimated $45 [billion] to $150 billion)
and the US defense budget of about $400 billion. And this does not even
take into account the immense and growing technological gap between the
militaries of the two countries or the strength enjoyed by the United
States because of its multiple alliances. China is not, and is
extremely unlikely to be, a strategic military threat the way the
Soviet Union once was."
Personal and
political liberties in China have greatly increased as the economy
improves and as the nation feels more secure. Friedberg says it is
"conceivable" that a richer China might not become more benign, but
many other US analysts suggest that it will be. The essence of China
politics is Confucian benevolence, not force. The Tang Dynasty of the
7th century, generally recognized as the height of Chinese culture, was
known for its religious tolerance at a time when the idea of religious
freedom was still heresy in Europe.
China hopes to be
able to reunite Taiwan through peaceful means. Even the official Taiwan
position envisages an eventual voluntary return to the motherland under
mutually acceptable political conditions. A more democratic China is
inevitable, though it may not be in the US mode, as soon as the US
ceases its imposition of a garrison-state mentality on China. A
conflict initiated by the United States to address the effects of a
garrison-state mentality imposed by its policies would be an enormous
tragedy of self-defeatism, and would also fail to achieve its perverted
purpose.
Other US policy
analysts, such as Michael Swaine of Stanford University, disagree with
Friedberg that the existing competitive aspects of the Sino-US
relationship now constitute a nascent military rivalry for continental
dominant. It is quite possible, perhaps even likely, that China will
not acquire the capabilities or develop the focused intent to struggle
with the United States for mastery in Asia. This possibility - and the
consequent need for a US policy that is designed both to encourage a
cooperative China and to cope with a more assertive one - is one that
Friedberg should have more fully acknowledged and assessed.
Friedberg insists
that deserving closer scrutiny is the notion that only by taking a soft
line can the United States discourage aggressive external behavior and
promote desirable domestic change. He argues that acknowledging real
dangers is a necessary first step to avoiding them, as well as in
preparing to cope with them if they should nevertheless come to pass.
Refusing or neglecting to do so, according to Friedberg, is a far more
likely formula for disaster.
Yet there
is a clear line between reality and paranoia. Friedberg needs to
rethink his proposition by borrowing another quote from historian
Taylor: "Once men imagine a danger, they soon turn it into a reality."
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