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Say_What Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-16-05 11:58 AM
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No Longer the 'Lone' Superpower
<clips>

No Longer the 'Lone' Superpower
Coming to Terms with China

I recall forty years ago, when I was a new professor working in the field of Chinese and Japanese international relations, that Edwin O. Reischauer once commented, "The great payoff from our victory of 1945 was a permanently disarmed Japan." Born in Japan and a Japanese historian at Harvard, Reischauer served as American ambassador to Tokyo in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. Strange to say, since the end of the Cold War in 1991 and particularly under the administration of George W. Bush, the United States has been doing everything in its power to encourage and even accelerate Japanese rearmament.

Such a development promotes hostility between China and Japan, the two superpowers of East Asia, sabotages possible peaceful solutions in those two problem areas, Taiwan and North Korea, left over from the Chinese and Korean civil wars, and lays the foundation for a possible future Sino-American conflict that the United States would almost surely lose. It is unclear whether the ideologues and war lovers of Washington understand what they are unleashing -- a possible confrontation between the world's fastest growing industrial economy, China, and the world's second most productive, albeit declining, economy, Japan; a confrontation which the United States would have both caused and in which it might well be consumed.

Let me make clear that in East Asia we are not talking about a little regime-change war of the sort that Bush and Cheney advocate. After all, the most salient characteristic of international relations during the last century was the inability of the rich, established powers -- Great Britain and the United States -- to adjust peacefully to the emergence of new centers of power in Germany, Japan, and Russia. The result was two exceedingly bloody world wars, a forty-five-year-long Cold War between Russia and the "West," and innumerable wars of national liberation (such as the quarter-century long one in Vietnam) against the arrogance and racism of European, American, and Japanese imperialism and colonialism.

The major question for the twenty-first century is whether this fateful inability to adjust to changes in the global power-structure can be overcome. Thus far the signs are negative. Can the United States and Japan, today's versions of rich, established powers, adjust to the reemergence of China -- the world's oldest, continuously extant civilization -- this time as a modern superpower? Or is China's ascendancy to be marked by yet another world war, when the pretensions of European civilization in its U.S. and Japanese projections are finally put to rest? That is what is at stake.

http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=103&ItemID=7446


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whistle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-16-05 12:03 PM
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1. The Chinese people will never forget what European, Japanese
...and American imperialism coupled with the Ming Dynasty corruption did to their country throughout the 19th century and right up to the end of WWII. This country truly is the sleeping tiger that has awakened.
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oscar111 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-16-05 12:15 PM
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2. China LW or RW?
confused!

someone tell me about china, and NO LONG ARTICLE url's!

just summarize in your own words. I am a busy man.

thanks.

China seems to have both elements in it, so tell me who is on top, and what you expect in ten years. Who will win inside china?

BTW, do they have free health care and no unemployment, etc? If not, what are the percents?
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