By Alan
Caruba
Napoleon
Bonaparte purportedly said “Let China sleep, for when China wakes, she will
shake the world.”
As Thomas
J. Christensen, the author of his recently published “The China Challenge:
Shaping the Choices of a Rising Power”, reminds us, “For millennia China was
arguably the greatest civilization on the planet and for many previous
centuries its most powerful empire.”
China is
no longer an empire, but it remains a huge nation geographically and huge in
terms of its population.
The population of China is estimated at 1,393,783,836
as of July 1 2014.
China's population is equivalent to 19.24% of the total
world population.China ranks number 1 in the list of countries by population.
54% of the population is urban (756,300,115 people in 2014).
The median age in China is 35.7 years.
Christensen is a former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
for East Asian and Pacific Affairs. Currently he is the William P. Boswell
Professor of World Politics and director of the China and World Program at
Princeton University. After reading his book, you might well conclude that
there is little about China and Asia he does not know.
We are mostly dependent on various news stories about China
to have any idea what is occurring, but the fact remains that just as the U.S.
has its optimists and pessimists, conservatives and liberals who influence
policy the same exists for China, so a lot depends on who is being quoted.
Generally, though, it is only the top leaders who are. That means we are
getting the Chinese “party line” and the occasional general or admiral warning
against any aggression.
China did not begin to awaken as a modern nation until after
the death of Mao Zedong, the founder of the People’s Republic of China, a
Communist with a capital “C.”
Christensen notes that, while keeping its political ideology, the
leader that followed him made a “peaceful transformation launched under CCP
leader Deng Xiaopping in 1978 and the collapse of the superpower Soviet Union
thirteen years later that made China appear to stand tall again among the great
powers.” The transition was to a capitalist-based economy.
These days the Chinese and the Russians are making efforts
to achieve areas of cooperation and, in particular, their militaries. They hold
drills together for common defense strategies.
Christensen believes that “China’s return to great power
status is perhaps the most important challenges in twenty-first century
American diplomacy”, but to put that in context he points out that “China’s per
capita income is only one fifth that of the United States” and “though a true
trade superpower, many of its exporters are controlled at least in part by
foreign investors.”
“Still, the pessimists do not give enough credit to the
sustainability of U.S. leadership in Asia,” says Christensen. “For example,
they often underestimate the value of American’s unparalleled network of allies
and security partners.” You can be sure
that the Chinese leadership does not.
They also have, as one would expect, concerns about U.S.
military power in their area of the world, but they feel the same about Japan
and South Korea as well. “China is not currently an enemy of the United
States,” says Christensen, nor is it likely to be for a long time to come.
“It does not need to be contained like the (former) Soviet
Union. Nor should China become the kind of regional or global adversary that we
have faced in the past, although that outcome, unfortunately, is still a
distinct possibility.” That possibility depends on China’s leadership now and
in the future. For now they are concentrating on their economy and are likely
to do so for many years to come.
“China’s economic clout is real and growing rapidly,
especially since the 2008 financial crisis. China has been the main engine of
growth for the world’s economy since that time and, by some measures, has
become the world’s number one trading state.” There is only one reason why the
U.S. has not yet recovered from the financial crisis and his name is Barack
Obama.
I suspect that Obama is held in disdain by the Chinese
leadership despite all the public handshakes. For one thing, China weathered
the financial crisis far better than the U.S. “One of the burdens the new Obama
administration inherited in early 2009 was a China bearing a mix of cockiness
and insecurity that would negatively influence its policies in 2009-2010,” says
Christensen and as the U.S. foundered in Afghanistan and Iraq “American power inspired
less awe.”
“Sometime in 2012, the ‘Asia pivot’” of the Obama
administration “would be jettisoned in Washington for the more subtle ‘Asia
rebalance.’” If you get the feeling that
the Obama administration has no real China policy or one that will have little
influence, you are right.
With regard to China, It likely does not matter what the
Obama administration does for its remaining one and a half years in office.
Various scholars and diplomats will continue to keep a
watchful eye on China and most surely many corporate leaders and U.S.
entrepreneurs will do so as well given its huge population as a marketplace.
It’s already a great tourist destination.
Napoleon was right.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
2 comments:
If the United States were to ever engage China in a war it would immediately have to become a nuclear war, and in that case we ALL lose..
The USA can't fight or possibly hope to ever win a land war with China, and that is based on sheer numbers... We don't have enough troops and/or ammunition to engage in a land war with China...
Texas, by the same token, China could never fight and win a land war in the U.S. I think any armed confrontations between the two will be fought in limited theaters (e.g. Korea, Vietnam, Taiwan, etc.) with neither side wanting to open the door to disaster by taking the battles to "the homeland."
The most disastrous scenario I would think of for the near foreseeable future would be an attempt by China to reclaim Taiwan. If they were able to mount a true "surprise" attack, they could probably stage defacto takeover of the island within just a few days with minimal US troop casualties and a plan/hope that they'd be able to keep us from massive contesting or retaliation.
That's a real danger, because I think they'd be wrong, and the war that would follow would be very difficult to keep local. Taking out resupply and troop ships would expand to shipyards which would then expand to China feeling they had to retaliate on US shipyards... and so on down the line.
Hopefully China will continue to do well enough economically that its leadership will realize how stupid it would be to jeopardize their wealth in a war like that.
- MJM
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