www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

Make me your Homepage
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

A new great power relationship

Updated: 2013-03-04 07:51
By Joseph Nye (China Daily)

Throughout history, the rise of a new power has been attended by uncertainty and anxieties. Often, though not always, violent conflict has followed. As Thucydides explained, the real roots of the Peloponnesian war in which the ancient Greek system tore itself apart, were the rise in the power of Athens and the fear it created in Sparta. The rise in the economic and military power of China, the world's most populous country, will be one of the two or three most important questions for world stability in this century, and some think that conflict with the US is inevitable. But it is a mistake to allow historical analogies determine our thinking. Instead, we should be asking how China and the US can create a new great power relationship.

Many analysts also compare the rise of China to that of Germany at the beginning of the last century. The rise in the power of Germany and the fear it created in Britain was one of the causes of World War I, in which the European system tore itself apart. This year China's economy will grow by nearly 7 to 8 percent and its defense spending will grow even more. Chinese leaders have spoken of China's "peaceful development", but analysts like John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago have flatly proclaimed that China cannot rise peacefully, and predicted that "the United States and China are likely to engage in an intense security competition with considerable potential for war."

Who is right? We will not know for some time, but the debaters should recall both halves of Thucydides' trenchant analysis. War was caused not merely by the rise of one power, but by the fear it engendered in another. The belief in the inevitability of conflict can become one of its main causes. Each side, believing it will end up at war with the other, makes reasonable military preparations, which then are read by the other side as confirmation of its worst fears. In a perverse transnational alliance, hawks in each country cite the others' statements as clear evidence. One way to make East Asia and the world safer is to avoid such exaggerated fears and self-fulfilling prophecies.

Moreover, while China has impressive power resources, one should be skeptical about projections based solely on current growth rates, political rhetoric, military contingency plans, and flawed historical analogies. It is important to remember that by 1900, Germany had surpassed Britain in industrial power, and the Kaiser was pursuing an adventurous, globally oriented foreign policy that was bound to bring about a clash with other great powers. In contrast, China still lags far behind the United States, and has focused its policies primarily on its economic development.

China has a long way to go to equal the power resources of the United States, and still faces many obstacles to its development. At the beginning of the 21st century, the American economy was about twice the size of China's in purchasing power parity, and more than three times as large at official exchange rates. All such comparisons and projections are somewhat arbitrary. Even if Chinese GDP passes that of the United States in the next decade, the two economies would be equivalent in size, but not equal in composition. China would still have a vast underdeveloped countryside, and it will begin to face demographic problems from the delayed effects of the strict family planning policy it enforced in the 20th century. Moreover, as countries develop, there is a tendency for growth rates to slow. China would not equal the United States in per capita income until sometime in the second half of the century.

Per capita income provides a measure of the sophistication of an economy. In other words, China's impressive growth rate combined with the size of its population will surely lead it to pass the American economy in total size at some point. This has already provided China with impressive power resources, but that is not the same as equal power. China is a long way from posing the kind of challenge to American preponderance that the Kaiser's Germany posed when it passed Britain at the beginning of the last century. The facts do not at this point justify alarmist predictions of a coming war. There is time to manage a cooperative relationship. As an important Chinese leader recently told me, "we need 30 years of peace to meet our development goals and come close to the US." During that period we can focus on building a new type of great power relationship.

Bill Clinton was right when he told Jiang Zemin in 1995 that the United States has more to fear from a weak China than a strong China. Thus far, the United States has accepted the rise of Chinese power and invited Chinese participation as a responsible stakeholder in the international system. Power is not always a zero sum game. Given the global problems that both China and the United States will face, they have much more to gain from working together than in allowing overwrought fears to drive them apart, but it will take wise policy on both sides to assure this future.

The author is a professor at Harvard and author of The Future of Power.

www.chinausfocus.com

(China Daily 03/04/2013 page9)

8.03K
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 久久精品国产精品亚洲20 | 波多野结衣免费视频观看 | 久久99国产精品久久欧美 | 色青青草原桃花久久综合 | 欧美二级在线观看免费 | 日韩久久网 | 久久免费播放 | 欧美成人免费xxx大片 | 国产精品毛片在线更新 | 亚洲一级毛片免观看 | 手机看黄av免费网址 | 精品久久久久久国产91 | 一级黄片一级毛片 | 美女被靠视频免费网站不需要会员 | 成人国产免费 | 在线看国产 | 日韩精品在线观看免费 | 三级精品在线观看 | 国产精品久久久久一区二区 | 久9久9精品视频在线观看 | 国产a精品 | 成人a毛片 | 亚洲作爱视频 | 久久国产首页 | 久久黄色网址 | 日本免费www | 亚洲欧美日韩国产vr在线观 | 欧美一区二区日韩一区二区 | 白白在线观看永久免费视频 | 精品国产理论在线观看不卡 | 波多野结衣在线观看3人 | 久久99国产亚洲高清观看韩国 | 亚洲精品欧洲久久婷婷99 | 欧美成人做性视频在线播放 | 日韩在线观看中文字幕 | 亚洲美女精品视频 | 麻豆一级片 | 国产乱码精品一区二区三上 | 国产精品久久久久久久久99热 | 欧美一级视频在线高清观看 | 视频二区精品中文字幕 |