For the past five years
or so, the common wisdom in Washington was that the best way to deal
with China's uncertain future was for U.S. policymakers to employ a
"hedging strategy" toward Beijing. The logic was elegant: Warriors at
the Pentagon should dissuade China from acting aggressively while
diplomats in Foggy Bottom should persuade China to act responsibly and
peacefully.
This hedging approach
was clearly articulated in 2006 in President Bush's National Security
Strategy, saying it would "encourage China to make the right strategic
decisions for its people while we hedge against other possibilities."
Earlier that year, the Pentagon's Quadrennial Defense Review Report
similarly spelled out that while it would focus on "encouraging China
to play a constructive, peaceful role in the Asia-Pacific region" it
would also aim to create "prudent hedges against the possibility that
cooperative approaches by themselves may fail to preclude future
conflict."
While the United States has been trying to create more
policy coherence and be more consultative in its posture toward the
world, China has been displaying some elements of a hedging strategy
against what some might see as an uncertain future for U.S. power.
Several factors might explain China's more multifaceted approach toward
the United States, including domestic demand for an external scapegoat
for economic woes, uncertainty about how the financial crisis will play
out, and an overall more intertwined relationship between China and the
world.
When Chinese asked me five years ago whether China was
a friend or a challenge to the United States, I would say both. I
called this seemingly dissonant approach toward China the result of a
complex democratic process of policy making. Similarly, as China's
middle class grows and its social stability becomes more worrisome, its
own posture is becoming less monolithic.
This is one of the main
findings from a trip to China I took last week with China scholar Josh
Eisenman. The trip, which was a follow up to a delegation we led last
September to Beijing, took us to four Chinese cities (Beijing, Qingdao,
Nanjing, and Shanghai) and one farming village in Shandong. In my view,
our conversations revealed more ambivalence about China's approach to
the United States. As some have said, China may "seize" perceived U.S.
weakness to reconfigure its position in the global pecking order. There
was no question that China benefited from good relations with the
United States and everyone preferred a healthy U.S. economy. But the
doubt over U.S. economic health relative to Chinese economic growth has
opened the door to a deeper debate.
On one hand, China benefits
from the U.S. security, markets, and financial arrangements. On the
other, however, China is naturally, almost mechanically, reconsidering
its place as it grows.
This theme emerged during a long conversation we had with a senior Chinese scholar. It went something like this:
"Does China feel that the United States is a threat?"
"No."
"So why does China feel the need to expand its power projection and build its military?"
"It is in response to U.S. military power."
In
other words, China may not feel that the United States is a threat per
se, but the very fact that the United States is powerful is driving
China to grow its power and act more like a "great nation." It is like
international relations balance of power theory is a natural law.
My
message to our Chinese hosts was simple: If China would like to act
more assertively in the South China Sea, for example, it needs to
provide global public goods as well. As it stands, China's opaque and
increasingly powerful military is starting to scare its neighbors. The
international system is predicated on safe sea-lanes that are
guaranteed by the U.S. navy; the safe sea-lanes facilitate open trade
and foster global peace and prosperity. If China wishes to challenge
this arrangement, it will have to offer something.
Another area
in which this theme has turned up is in the U.S-China economic
relationship. Just before we left for our trip to China, Prime Minister
Wen Jiabao said he was worried about his dollar assets. "We have lent a
huge amount of money to the US. Of course we are concerned about the
safety of our assets. To be honest, I am definitely a little worried,"
he said. His statement masked China's dilemma: It needs the United
States to stimulate its economy with loser fiscal and monetary
policies, which could drive down the value of the dollar, hurting
China's dollar assets. Complicating the relationship, a weaker dollar
could also lead to a lower volume of Chinese exports to the United
States at least in the long run.
Fortunately, this week at the
G20 meeting in London, Presidents Hu Jintao and Barack Obama found
common ground on shared interests of stabilizing the global economy,
cooperating in addressing climate change, and creating a high-level
strategic and economic U.S.-China dialogue, which could help build
trust between these two powerful nations. Out of a common sense of
fairness, there seems to be agreement that the governance of the IMF
must be restructured as well. The China hedge may be reversing but so
far longer-term, strategic interests have prevailed.
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