US-China Relations (3rd Ed)

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US-China Relations (3rd Ed) Page 2

by Robert G Sutter


  espionage targeting US firms. Security issues focus on the buildup of Chi-

  nese military forces and the threat they pose to US interests in Taiwan and

  the broader Asia-Pacific. Political issues include China’s controversial

  record on human rights, democracy, religious freedom, and family planning

  practices. Sovereignty questions involve disputes over the status of Taiwan,

  Tibet, Xinjiang, and Hong Kong, and the often intense disputes in contested

  territory along China’s eastern and southern rim that involve maritime transit

  and security issues of importance to the United States. Foreign policy dis-

  putes focus on China’s support for states deviating from US-backed norms,

  notably including at various times North Korea, Sudan, Myanmar (Burma),

  Iran, Syria, Cuba, Zimbabwe, and Venezuela; and Chinese trade, investment,

  and aid involving resource-rich and poorly governed states in Africa and

  other parts of the developing world, which undermines Western sanctions

  and other measures designed to pressure these governments to reform. 13

  The following chapters show that these differences reflect conflicting

  interests and values that often bedeviled US-China relations before the estab-

  lishment of the PRC in 1949 as well as since that time.

  On the US side:

  • US policy and practice demonstrates the strong rationale to seek change in

  China in directions favored by the United States. This values-based

  American approach often clashes with the realities in US-China relations,

  arguing for greater US policy pragmatism.

  • US government and nongovernment opinion shows wariness and is disin-

  clined to accept China until and unless it accommodates satisfactorily to

  US values and norms.

  Introduction

  7

  • US exceptionalism prompts US policy makers backed by broader

  American opinion to often see their actions in morally correct terms, so

  they have a tendency to play down or ignore the negative implications of

  their actions for China and Chinese interests.

  • Nongovernment actors play a strong role in influencing policy, reinforcing

  the need for US government policy to deal with domestic US determinants

  in relations with China as well as the international aspects of those rela-

  tions. These nongovernment actors tend to reinforce the three above-noted

  elements of a US values-based approach to China seen as less accommo-

  dating to Chinese policies and practices at odds with US norms.

  • The long-standing US strategic interest in China saw a prolonged reluc-

  tance to undertake the risks, costs, and commitments of leadership in

  relations with China until forced to do so by the Japanese attack on Pearl

  Harbor at the start of World War II. This period disappointed those in

  China seeking help from the United States. Since then, US leadership and

  resolve generally has continued amid often great sacrifice and trauma,

  caused in particular by repeated, sometimes very costly, and often unpre-

  dicted shifts in China. The resulting distrust in Sino-American relations

  seems strong.

  On the China side:

  • China’s “victim mentality,” a long-standing dark view of foreign affairs

  strongly propagated by the Chinese government, compels China to sustain

  and advance national power and independence in order to protect its inter-

  ests in the face of perceived acquisitive and often duplicitous world pow-

  ers, notably the United States.

  • Chinese exceptionalism places the PRC clearly in the lead in the small

  group of countries that view their foreign behavior in more self-righteous

  ways than the United States does. Concurrent with the state-fostered “vic-

  tim mentality,” Beijing fosters a view that effectively sways opinion

  among the Chinese elite and populace that China is always morally correct

  in its foreign decisions. Information on China’s many episodes of aggres-

  sion and coercive practices for self-interest is suppressed or controlled. In

  this view, disputes between China and other countries are not China’s

  fault; they arise because of erroneous policies of other countries or sinister

  manipulation by larger powers, notably the United States. Since China is

  never at fault, the PRC has never recognized making a mistake in foreign

  affairs.

  • China shows particular worry about the leading world power (usually the

  United States) and how it will use its presence and influence along Chi-

  na’s periphery, broader international influence, and involvement in Chi-

  8

  Chapter 1

  nese internal affairs to enhance its own power and influence at the expense

  of Chinese interests and influence.

  • As China rises in international power and influence, the leading power

  (the United States) is seen to be inclined to constrain and thwart the rise in

  order to preserve its dominant position.

  • Chinese suspicions and wariness toward the United States and toward

  foreign affairs in general are reinforced by strong currents of nationalism

  and Chinese domestic politics sensitive to perceived foreign pressures or

  impositions.

  Adding to these determinants and values is the fact that the United States

  and China are big countries—the world’s most powerful. Their approaches to

  each other will not be easily changed by smaller powers or other outside

  forces.

  Meanwhile, the checkered record of the United States and China in man-

  aging their differences in the interest of pragmatic cooperation since the

  Nixon-Mao breakthrough more than forty years ago has given rise to experi-

  ences on each side that add to bilateral wariness and friction. They include:

  • Taiwan: Private and until recently secret Nixon administration interaction

  with China shows US leaders at the outset giving assurances to China

  about Taiwan that appeared to open the way to unification on terms agree-

  able to China. Subsequently, Chinese leaders were repeatedly confronted

  with US actions that were at odds with earlier US promises and impeded

  Chinese ambitions regarding Taiwan. Chinese distrust of US policy, espe-

  cially regarding Taiwan, became deep and long lasting, and continues

  today.

  • Secrecy: Beginning with Nixon, various US administrations determined to

  hide US concessions on Taiwan and other sensitive issues through secret

  diplomacy with China in order to keep Congress as well as US media and

  other interested Americans in the dark on these sensitive questions. One

  result was repeated backlash from these forces against US administration

  China policy. Such backlash was seen in congressional action drafting the

  Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 and congressional and media reaction to the

  George H. W. Bush handling of China policy after the Tiananmen incident

  of 1989. The perceived duplicity of the US administration on sensitive

  issues of China policy has led to continued suspicion among congressional

  officials, the media, and other US opinion leaders regarding the purpose

  and implications of sensitive US policies toward China. The US domestic

  backlash and suspicion poses a significant drag on US administration


  efforts to move forward on sensitive issues in US-China relations.

  • Respective costs and benefits: Debate in the United States and China

  repeatedly centers on whether one side or the other is gaining dispropor-

  Introduction

  9

  tionately in the relationship while the other side defers and makes conces-

  sions. The Chinese government, given its authoritarian system, has done a

  better job than the United States in keeping such debate from spilling over

  publicly to affect policy in negative ways. Nonetheless, the tendency of

  both sides to be wary of being taken advantage of by the other remains

  strong.

  • Nongovernment actors: Elites in the Chinese and US governments have

  been the key decision makers in Sino-American relations. However,

  foreign policy in the United States, and particularly US policy toward

  China, has a long history of American nongovernment forces influencing

  policy. These groups and individuals have been especially important when

  broader international and domestic circumstances do not support a particu-

  lar elite-led policy toward China. Thus, they were very important in the

  years after the Tiananmen incident and the end of the Cold War. Chinese

  leaders for their part say they are constrained by patriotic public opinion in

  China, which they aver runs counter to Chinese compromises on Taiwan

  or other sensitive issues in the interests of fostering better US-China rela-

  tions.

  PURPOSE AND SCOPE OF THIS BOOK

  The review offered here synthesizes and analyzes the views of various as-

  sessments regarding the background, issues, and trends in Sino-American

  relations. It shows enormous changes over time, with patterns of confronta-

  tion, conflict, and suspicion much more prevalent than patterns of accommo-

  dation and cooperation. The past four decades have featured sometimes re-

  markable improvements in relations as leaders on both sides have pursued

  practical benefits through pragmatic means. That the base of cooperation is

  often incomplete, thin, and dependent on changeable circumstances at home

  and abroad is evident as the societies and governments more often than not

  show salient differences over a variety of critical issues involving security,

  values, and economics. Even during periods of public cooperation, probing

  below the surface shows officials, elites, and public opinion on both sides

  demonstrating persisting suspicion and wariness of the other country and its

  possible negative intentions or implications affecting Sino-American rela-

  tions.

  The purpose of the book is not to argue against continuing efforts in both

  the United States and China to promote a positive trajectory in Sino-

  American relations. Such efforts are viewed as reasonable and based on

  common interests of both countries in seeking greater cooperation. Nor does

  it argue against US and Chinese public disagreements and competition in

  peaceful pursuit of their respective interests. Instead, this volume conveys the

  10

  Chapter 1

  perspective of experienced policy makers and specialists on both sides who

  understand that perceived advances or setbacks in Sino-American relations

  involve only part of a complicated relationship. It seeks to assess more fully

  the complexity of the relationship, so improvements and frictions in official

  relations between the two nations are placed in balanced context.

  Partly because of the salience of US-China relations for international

  politics, political scientists and other experts devote impressive effort to

  understanding the relationship and charting its future trajectory, notably us-

  ing international relations (IR) theories. Nevertheless, experience with many

  past failed predictions and often unexpected twists and turns in the relation-

  ship argues against adherence only to one IR theory in addressing Sino-

  American relations. Prominent IR scholar Aaron Friedberg early in this cen-

  tury usefully showed how different American and other IR specialists viewed

  China’s rising power and influence through the lens of realism, liberalism, or

  constructivism—the leading theories in the IR field.

  Indeed, the complex American relationship with China has many features

  that may best be assessed using different perspectives from IR theory. Deep-

  ening strategic competition and a massive security dilemma between China

  and the United States in the Asia-Pacific region underline forces and phe-

  nomena that seem best understood through a realist lens. At the same time,

  American stress on open trade and investment, related social and political

  liberalism, and deepening Chinese engagement with the existing world order

  seem best assessed through a liberal perspective in IR theory. In addition, a

  fundamental reason US efforts to engage and change China’s policies and

  practices have occurred on the US side and have been resisted on the Chinese

  side has to do with a profound gap between the national identity in China and

  that in the United States, a topic well explained by constructivist IR theory.

  While written by a specialist who sees US-China dynamics best viewed

  through a realist lens, this study sees the wisdom of using an eclectic ap-

  proach in applying IR theory to explain varied developments in US-China

  relations. Meanwhile, the complexities and perceived shortcomings in as-

  sessing Sino-American dynamics discussed above lead this author to employ

  throughout the book the type of contextual analysis used by US government

  and other policy and intelligence analysts. The author’s intention is to offer a comprehensive assessment of the various determinants seen in the context of

  Chinese and US decision making in order to provide (1) a realistic view of

  why and how government officials and others influential in decisions rele-

  vant to the United States-China relationship have made their choices and (2)

  a realistic view of the implications of those decisions. Those determinants

  take into account the changing interplay of power, interests, development,

  identity, norms, and values present in different countries and regions.

  Introduction

  11

  OUTLINE

  This book assesses determinants—historical and contemporary—that explain

  the uncertain situation prevailing today between areas of convergence and

  areas of divergence in contemporary US-China relations. It also thoroughly

  examines those issues (i.e., areas of convergence and divergence) and offers

  a likely forecast for US-China relations.

  Proceeding from this introductory chapter, which provides a summary of

  some findings and explains the purpose and scope of the book, chapters 2

  through 7 treat the historical development and status of US-China relations

  with an eye toward discerning historical determinants relevant to contempo-

  rary US-China relations. Chapters 8 through 11 examine four major issue-

  areas in contemporary US-China relations, endeavoring to discern determi-

  nants relevant to the status and outlook of the relationship. Chapter 12 con-

  cludes the study by articulating an outlook for Sino-American relations.

  Chapter Two

 
Patterns of US-China Relations

  Prior to World War II

  Throughout much of the nineteenth century, the United States played a limit-

  ed role in Chinese affairs. Initial American traders and missionaries had no

  choice but to accommodate the restrictive and sometimes capricious prac-

  tices of Chinese regulation of trade and other foreign interaction at Canton in southeastern China, part of the Chinese government’s broad Tribute System

  restricting and regulating Chinese interaction with foreigners. 1

  The US government followed the lead of Great Britain, France, and other

  powers that used wars to compel the declining Qing dynasty (1644–1912) to

  meet foreign demands and grant privileges to foreigners, including

  Americans who did not take part in the fighting. Americans in China sup-

  ported and benefited from the resulting Treaty System. The emerging new

  order gave foreigners extraterritoriality, the right to reside in China under

  foreign laws and jurisdiction. The series of foreign treaties imposed on China

  in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries opened Chinese ports to

  foreign commerce and residence; established equal diplomatic relations be-

  tween the foreign powers and China, with foreign diplomats stationed in the

  Chinese capital, Peking; allowed foreign missionaries and others to live and

  work throughout China; provided for concessions of land and development

  rights that made parts of China, like Shanghai, into foreign-ruled enclaves;

  and allowed foreign military forces to patrol Chinese coastal and inland

  waterways and eventually to deploy ground forces in China to secure their

  interests. The treaties also marked the loss of substantial pieces of Chinese

  territory to foreign ownership. 2

  A few American companies made significant profits in China trade, but

  the scope of US trade and investment there remained very small. Christian

  missionaries comprised the largest and most influential group of Americans

  13

  14

  Chapter 2

  in China until the start of World War II, but for much of the period they

  numbered only in the hundreds. 3

  American diplomats, merchants, and missionaries reacted with concern as

 

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