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Kissinger: Conflict with China not an option Henry A. Kissingeriht.com Updated: 2005-06-10 08:58
The relationship between the United States and China is beset by ambiguity.
On the one hand, seven presidents have affirmed the importance of cooperative
relations with China and a commitment to a one-China
policy.
Nevertheless, ambivalence has suddenly re-emerged. Various U.S.
officials, members of Congress and the news media are attacking China's
policies, from the exchange rate to military buildup, much of it in a tone
implying that China is on some sort of probation.
Dr. Henry
Kissinger, former US secretary of state, receives a gift sword during his
visit to the Shaolin Temple in Henan Province in this May 12, 2005 photo.
[newsphoto] | Before continuing on this subject, I
must point out that the consulting company I chair advises clients with business
interests around the world, including China. Also, in early May, I spent a week
in China, much of it as a guest of the government.
The rise of China -
and Asia - will, over the next decades, bring about a substantial reordering of
the international system. The center of gravity of world affairs is shifting
from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
China's emerging role is often
compared to that of imperial Germany at the beginning of the last century, the
implication being that a strategic confrontation is inevitable and the United
States had best prepare for it. That assumption is as dangerous as it is wrong.
Military imperialism is not the Chinese style. China seeks its objectives by
careful study, patience and the accumulation of nuances.
It is also
unwise to apply to China the policy of military containment of the cold war. The
Soviet Union was the heir of an imperialist tradition. The Chinese state in its
present dimensions has existed substantially for 2,000 years.
Taiwan is
often invoked as a potential trigger. This could happen if either side abandons
the restraint that has characterized U.S.-Chinese relations on the subject for
more than a generation. But it is far from inevitable. All major countries have
recognized China's claim that Taiwan is part of China. So have seven American
presidents of both parties, none more emphatically than President George W.
Bush.
With respect to the overall balance, China's large and educated
population, its vast markets, its growing role in the world economy and global
financial system foreshadow an increasing capacity to pose an array of
incentives and risks, the currency of international influence.
Short of
seeking to destroy China as a functioning entity, however, this capacity is
inherent in the global economic and financial processes that America has been
pre-eminent in fostering.
The test of China's intentions will be whether
its growing capacity will be used to seek to exclude America from Asia or
whether it will be part of a cooperative effort. Paradoxically, the best
strategy for achieving antihegemonic objectives is to maintain close relations
with all the major countries of Asia, including China. In that sense, the rise
of Asia will be a test of America's competitiveness in the world now emerging,
especially in the countries of Asia.
The vast majority of Asian nations
view their relations with the United States in terms of their perception of
their own interests. In a U.S. confrontation with China, they would seek to
avoid choosing sides; at the same time, they would generally have greater
incentives for participating in a multilateral system with America than adopting
an exclusionary Asian nationalism.
They will not want to be seen as
pieces of an American design. India, for example, finds no inconsistency between
its improving relations with the United States and proclaiming a strategic
partnership with China.
China, in its own interest, is seeking
cooperation with the United States for many reasons, including the need to close
the gap between its own developed and developing regions; the imperative of
adjusting its political institutions to the accelerating economic and
technological revolutions; the potentially catastrophic impact of a cold war
with America on the continued raising of the standard of living, on which the
legitimacy of the government depends.
But from this it does not follow
that any damage to China caused by a cold war would benefit America. The United
States would have few followers anywhere in Asia. Asian countries would continue
trading with China. Whatever happens, China will not disappear. The American
interest in cooperative relations with China is for the pursuit of world
peace.
Attitudes are psychologically important. China needs to be careful
about policies that seem to exclude America from Asia and about U.S.
sensitivities regarding human rights, which will influence the flexibility and
scope of America's stance toward China.
America needs to understand that
a hectoring tone evokes in China memories of imperialist condescension and is
not appropriate in dealing with a country that has managed 4,000 years of
uninterrupted self-government.
As a new century begins, the relations
between China and the United States may well determine whether our children will
live in turmoil even worse than the 20th century or whether they will witness a
new world order compatible with universal aspirations for peace and
progress.
(Henry A. Kissinger, former US secretary of
state, heads the consulting firm Kissinger and
Associates.)
(Courtesy of International Herald
Tribune)
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