The
biggest geopolitical risk of our times is not a conflict between Israel and
Iran over nuclear proliferation. Nor is it the risk of chronic disorder in an
arc of instability that now runs from the Maghreb all the way to the Hindu
Kush. It is not even the risk of cold war II between Russia and the west over
Ukraine.
All
of these are serious risks, of course; but none is as serious as the challenge
of sustaining the peaceful character of China's rise. That is why it is
particularly disturbing to hear Japanese and Chinese officials and analysts
compare the countries' bilateral relationship to that between Britain and
Germany on the eve of the first world war.
The
disputes between China and several of its neighbours over disputed islands and
maritime claims (starting with the conflict with Japan) are just the tip of the
iceberg. As China becomes an even greater economic power, it will become
increasingly dependent on shipping routes for its imports of energy, other
inputs, and goods.
This
implies the need to develop a blue-water navy to ensure that China's economy
cannot be strangled by a maritime blockade.
But
what China considers a defensive imperative could be perceived as aggressive
and expansionist by its neighbours and the United States. And what looks like a
defensive imperative to the US and its Asian allies – building further military
capacity in the region to manage China's rise – could be perceived by China as
an aggressive attempt to contain it.
Historically,
whenever a new great power has emerged and faced an existing power, military
conflict has ensued. The inability to accommodate Germany's rise led to two
world wars in the 20th century; Japan's confrontation with another Pacific
power – the US – brought the second world war to Asia.
Of
course, there are no iron laws of history: China and its interlocutors are not
fated to repeat the past. Trade, investment, and diplomacy may defuse rising
tensions. But will they?
Europe's
great powers finally tired of slaughtering one another. Facing a shared threat
from the Soviet bloc and US prodding, European countries created institutions
to promote peace and co-operation, leading to economic and monetary union, now
a banking union, and possibly in the future a fiscal and political union.
But
no such institutions exist in Asia, where long-standing historical grievances
among China, Japan, Korea, India, and other countries remain open wounds. Even
two of America's most important allies – Japan and South Korea – find
themselves in a bitter dispute about the Korean "comfort women"
forced to work in Japanese military brothels before and during the second world
war, despite an official apology from Japan 20 years ago.
For
starters, Asia's powers have recently elected or are poised to elect leaders
who are more nationalistic than their predecessors. The Japanese prime
minister, Shinzo Abe, Chinese president, Xi Jinping, South Korean president,
Park Geun-hye, and Narendra Modi, who is likely to be India's next prime
minister, all fall into this category.
Second,
all of these leaders now face massive challenges stemming from the need for
structural reforms to sustain satisfactory growth rates in the face of global economic
forces that are disrupting old models. Different types of structural reforms
are crucially important in China, Japan, India, Korea, and Indonesia. If
leaders in one or more of these countries were to fail on the economic front,
they could feel politically constrained to shift the blame on to foreign
"enemies".
Third,
many US allies in Asia (and elsewhere) are wondering whether America's recent
strategic "pivot" to Asia is credible. Given the feeble US response
to the crises in Syria, Ukraine, and other geopolitical hot spots, the American
security blanket in Asia looks increasingly tattered. China is now testing the
credibility of US guarantees, raising the prospect that America's friends and
allies – starting with Japan – may have to take more of their security needs
into their own hands.
Finally,
unlike Europe, where Germany accepted the blame for the horrors of the second
world war and helped to lead a decades-long effort to construct today's
European Union, no such historical agreement exists among Asian countries. As a
result, chauvinist sentiments have been instilled in generations that are far
removed from the horrors of past wars, while institutions capable of fostering
economic and political co-operation remain in their infancy.
This
is a lethal combination of factors that risks eventually leading to military
conflict in a key region of the global economy. How can the US credibly pivot
to Asia in a way that does not fuel Chinese perceptions of attempted
containment or US allies' perceptions of appeasement of China?
How
can China build a legitimate defensive military capability that a great power
needs and deserves without worrying its neighbours and the US that it aims to
seize disputed territory and aspires to strategic hegemony in Asia? And how can
Asia's other powers trust that the US will support their legitimate security
concerns, rather than abandon them to effective Finlandisation under Chinese
domination?
It
will take enormous wisdom on the part of leaders in the region – and in the US
– to find diplomatic solutions to Asia's multitude of geopolitical and
geo-economic tensions. In the absence of supporting regional institutions,
there is little else to ensure that the desire for peace and prosperity
prevails over conditions and incentives that tend toward conflict and war.
Nouriel
Roubini
theguardian.com
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