The dangers of fatalism in U.S.-China relations
Susan L. Shirk
The Globe and Mail - April 27, 2023
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-the-dangers-of-fatalism-in-us-china-relations
Susan
L. Shirk is a research professor and chair of the 21st Century China Center at
the School of Global Policy and Strategy at the University of California, San
Diego, and served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in the U.S. Bureau of
East Asia and Pacific Affairs. Her most recent book, Overreach:
How China Derailed Its Peaceful Rise, won the 2023 Lionel Gelber Prize.
It’s
looking more and more like China and the United States – politicians and
ordinary citizens alike – have given up on one another. In a recent speech, Wang Jisi,
one of China’s most respected international relations scholars, said that
“China no longer holds any expectations for improving China-U.S. relations.” A
Chinese diplomat told me that people in China had lost hope that diplomatic
talks or changes in policy by either side could mend relations. They believe
that the U.S. strategic intention is to kill China, he said, no matter how the
country acts. China’s President, Xi Jinping, depicted American
objectives in the worst possible light at the March, 2023, meeting of the
National People’s Congress, blaming the U.S. for an
“all-around containment, encirclement and suppression of China.”
American
politicians and the public have come to similarly pessimistic conclusions about
Chinese intentions. According to a March, 2023, poll by the Pew Research
Center, negative views of China are at an all-time high (83 per cent) among Americans, and
the share of Americans describing China not just as a competitor, but as an
enemy, has risen to 38 per cent. More than half of Americans think that the two
countries cannot co-operate on international issues.
This
fatalistic gloom about the future of U.S.-China relations is a
dangerous trend. It could blind the two sides to realistic possibilities for
working out their differences peacefully and cause them to drift into war.
The
U.S. and China have become so hostile toward one another that they have lost
all their motivation to make gains through mutual accommodation. Why adjust
your behaviour if you believe that it won’t be reciprocated or even
acknowledged by the other side?
That’s
why the most urgent priority for both sides should be a return to traditional
diplomacy and confidence-building, to reduce hostility. The U.S. government has
been calling for “guard rails” and “putting a floor under the relationship.”
But another crucial objective is to dispel hostility and restore motivation for
compromise. Showing our ability to get agreement on some less sensitive issues,
such as having Fulbright scholars and Peace Corps volunteers return to China, would
help. Another way to incentivize positive action would be to publicly
acknowledge it when it occurs, for example, crediting China for brokering the peace agreement between Iran and
Saudi Arabia.
Today’s
dangerously high level of hostility has resulted from the interaction of
China’s overreach and America’s overreaction. After Mao Zedong died, Chinese
leaders Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin exercised international self-restraint to
reassure the world that China’s intentions were peaceful, even as its economic and
military capabilities were growing. China managed its foreign policy to enable
it to rise peacefully.
But
during the Hu Jintao era, even before the 2008 global financial crisis, China
changed its behaviour. Its aggressive posture in world affairs and tightened
grips on its domestic society and economy led to what it most feared – a return
to the politics of containment.
After
2012, Xi Jinping’s centralized, personalistic regime, and the top-down pressure
it put on all officials to demonstrate their loyalty to the leader, made it
even more prone to overreach. China’s image as a responsible power was sullied
by Beijing’s new, bullying style of foreign policy, which included economic
coercion against countries that critiqued Chinese domestic policies; belligerent
“wolf warrior” rhetoric; operations to cultivate political influence with
politicians and organizations in other countries; cyberhacking of foreign
firms; military intimidation against Taiwan and Japan; and coast
guard and fishing boat deployments in the coastal zones of Southeast Asian
neighbours, in violation of international law. All backfired against China. The
thought-reform camps for Muslims in Xinjiang and the destruction of Hong Kong’s
freedoms under the Hong Kong Security Law made China all the more repugnant in
the eyes of Westerners. Mr. Xi’s continuing cover-up of information about COVID-19 and his refusal to
condemn Russia’s brutal unprovoked invasion of Ukraine further inflamed
animosity against China.
Chinese
policy making could become even more arbitrary and self-defeating during Mr.
Xi’s third term, which began in 2022. Mr. Xi will be General-Secretary of the
Communist Party, Chairman of the Central Military Commission, and the country’s
President for at least another five years. Typically, when political leaders
extend their time in power by changing the constitution, the quality of
governance declines as the strongman leader struggles to remain popular and
shore up the loyalty of other politicians, who resent the lack of
power-sharing. Economic problems pile up and foreign policy becomes a handy
tool to stimulate nationalism and divert attention from domestic problems, with
potentially dangerous consequences. That’s why people inside and outside China
worry that Mr. Xi might dare to attack Taiwan, even before the end of his third
term in 2027.
Story
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While
the impetus to push back against China extends beyond the U.S., it is strongest
in Washington. The Biden administration came into office intending to revise
the Trump administration’s confrontational strategy toward China, but finds
itself perpetuating it instead. Joe Biden is using the contest with China as a
foil for winning bipartisan support for his legislative agenda of American
self-renewal. Taking advantage of the rivalry with China, he is challenging the
U.S. Congress to prove that democracies can perform better than autocracies.
Having heard both Democratic and Republican administrations vilifying China,
the public naturally has become more suspicious of it. Anti-China attitudes
have become the bipartisan axis of American politics. It’s turned into a new
kind of political correctness that interferes with sensible thinking about the
cost-benefit trade-offs involved in strategic choices toward China.
Many
Americans have concluded that China is bound and determined to subvert the
global order and supplant the U.S. as the world’s No. 1 power. They believe
that negotiating to induce Beijing to moderate its aims and act more
co-operatively would be fruitless.
Public
statements by senior Biden administration officials accusing Beijing of
“genocide” against Muslims in Xinjiang and identifying China as a greater
threat than Russia – even though Russia is fighting a brutal, unprovoked war in
Ukraine – communicate an unequivocally adversarial stand toward China.
A
Chinese scholar, who had been briefed on the Bali meeting between Mr. Biden and
Mr. Xi in November, told me that Mr. Biden had sought to reassure the Chinese
leader on Taiwan and other issues, but that Mr. Xi didn’t believe he would be
able to deliver on these commitments. They felt President Biden lacked the
political courage to express his sentiments publicly, and that Congress would
be unlikely to go along with them.
Strategic
competition between China and the U.S. is focused on science and technology.
U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan has stated that staying a couple
of generations ahead in advanced logic and memory chips is no longer adequate;
instead, America must “maintain as large of a lead as possible.” Export controls,
embargoes on American technology to Chinese firms, and visa restrictions on
Chinese science and engineering students who seek to study at America’s
world-class universities – all of these policies aim to protect national
security, but they end up harming American competitiveness.
America’s
greatest asymmetric advantages are its open society, fair and law-based market
economy, and its allure for talented people from around the world. Politicizing
access to the American market, as China does its own, may give the U.S. an edge
in the short term, but it ultimately harms economic efficiency and
innovativeness, and tarnishes America’s credibility as the defender of open
markets. Embargoing our technology to keep it out of the hands of Chinese firms
will just align their incentives more closely to Beijing’s security-driven
pursuit of self-sufficiency.
What’s
more, these sanctions stoke anti-American sentiment in China. Since the
sanctions aren’t part of a larger diplomatic strategy to nudge China into
changing its behaviour, these restrictions are construed in China as a weapon
for hampering their country’s progress. Ever since 2019, when the U.S. Commerce
Department banned sales of American technology to the private Chinese company
Huawei because of its close ties to the Chinese government, Chinese public
views have grown increasingly anti-American. The festering resentment created
by hostile U.S. rhetoric and actions, which is then fuelled by CCP propaganda,
becomes a liability for stabilizing the relationship in the future.
But
China’s overreach doesn’t have to lead to overreaction by America and a
dangerous stand-off between the two. The next few years will tell whether the
American body politic – and its counterparts in Canada and other democratic
countries – can respond to the Chinese government’s actions in a proportionate
and effective manner. The U.S. aim should be not to hold on to the top slot in
a global pecking order. Instead, its overriding goal should be preventing a war
by motivating China to behave constructively and not aggressively toward other
countries, even if in some dimensions it outdoes the United States. China’s
co-operation on global climate and public-health
threats is also essential.
Some
voices, including respected commentators such as Fareed Zakaria and Max Boot,
and the editorial boards of The New York Times and The Washington Post, are
urging a rethink of the hostile confrontation with China. Kurt Campbell, the
top White House official responsible for China policy, framed the challenge: “I think you will see in
the coming months whether it’s going to be possible to re-establish effective,
predictable, constructive diplomacy between the United States and China.”
These will be crucial months.
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