Engaging
China will ease
trans-Atlantic
tensions
Phillip H.
Gordon
International Herald
Tribune
BEIJING — For several years now, one
of the most important trends in international relations has been the apparent
disintegration of what was once called "the West."
Under George W. Bush, it was
often noted, America was becoming hawkish,
religious and unilateralist, while Europeans were seeking to create a "multi-
polar world" based on international law and very different cultural
values.
Viewed from Washington or
Paris, there was certainly much to be said for this assessment — which the split
over the Iraq war seemingly
confirmed.
Viewed from the other side of
the world, however, and in light of recent developments, the differences within
the West no longer seem so great. On a wide range of global issues, Americans
and Europeans are coming together. As they do so, engaging a rising
China will be one of their greatest
challenges.
This is the conclusion that
emerges from a week- long trip to Asia with a group of U.S. and European foreign-policy analysts and
former officials, designed to explore how America and Europe could better work together in
managing China's rise. Ironically, the premise
of the trip was that divergent trans-Atlantic perspectives on
China — an impression fueled
by the dispute over the potential lifting of the EU's arms embargo on
China — could turn out to be one more
nail in the coffin of the West. Instead, talks with Chinese officials and
analysts underscore not only that the trans-Atlantic gaps are narrowing but that
gaps between China and the West need serious
attention.
One issue on which this new
dynamic could not be more clear or more important is Iran. To be
sure, trans- Atlantic differences on Iran remain, and Europeans still worry about a
possible U.S. military strike
on Tehran's
nuclear program. More broadly, however, American and European positions have
converged, and both sides agree that the best approach is one that offers
Iran political and economic
incentives to suspend uranium enrichment but threatens sanctions and isolation
if it does not. China,
however — while declaring its support for the goal of a non-nuclear
Iran — refuses to back even
the mild sanctions proposed by the European Union and required by a UN Security
Council Resolution that China supported. In a critique the
Americans once leveled at the EU, Americans and Europeans now together complain
that China is putting its economic
interests above its global responsibility for nonproliferation. Without Chinese
(and Russian) help, however, even a united West cannot solve the
problem.
California takes lead on curbing carbon
emissions
Another example is climate
change. For years, Europeans have been justifiably furious with the
United
States for its refusal to accept evidence that
human activity was causing potentially catastrophic global warming. More
recently, however, the U.S.
debate has started to change, states like California have taken the lead in mandating
carbon emissions cuts, and even the Bush administration has had to admit the
problem. The new Democratic Congress is putting forward emissions-curbing
legislation and the next president will almost certainly move
America closer to the longstanding
European position. China, however, is dragging its
feet.
China's policies in Africa and
Latin America are also diverging from a growing
Western consensus. Driven by a thirst for oil and in the name of respecting
sovereignty, China is
developing close political ties with and selling weapons to some of the world's
least respectable regimes — in Chad, Cuba, Ethiopia, Sudan and Zimbabwe.
Even on the issue of
China itself, the trans-Atlantic gap
seems to be narrowing. The EU's planned lifting of its divisive arms embargo,
for example, was put on ice indefinitely when the National People's Congress in
March 2005 passed an "Anti-Secession Law" threatening to use military force to
prevent a declaration of independence by Taiwan. That message was reiterated
loudly and clearly to our group when a Chinese general told us that
"Taiwan independence means war" and
reminded us that the People's Liberation Army had fought three wars and had
never been defeated. To use an expression once applied to the trans-Atlantic
relationship, it was a nice illustration of how China is still living on Mars, while
America, in the wake of the
Iraq disaster, is moving closer to
Venus.
There are still real
differences within the West, of course. But it is also clear that those
differences are narrowing, and that the announcement of the end of the
trans-Atlantic partnership was premature. The containment of Russia may no longer provide the glue to hold
that partnership together, but the common interest in engaging
China ought to.
Philip H. Gordon is Senior
Fellow for U.S. Foreign
Policy at the Brookings Institution in Washington.
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