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  • Asian's fear of a Yellow Planet boosts US influence

    China’s Disputes in Asia Buttress Influence of U.S.


    By EDWARD WONG
    Published: September 22, 2010

    BEIJING — For the last several years, one big theme has dominated talk of the future of Asia: As China rises, its neighbors are being inevitably drawn into its orbit, currying favor with the region’s new hegemonic power.
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    Yao Dawei/Xinhua, via Associated Press
    Premier Wen Jiabao of China spoke about tensions with Japan during a meeting with representatives of Chinese nationals and Chinese Americans on Tuesday in New York.
    The presumed loser, of course, is the United States, whose wealth and influence are being spent on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and whose economic troubles have eroded its standing in a more dynamic Asia.

    But rising frictions between China and its neighbors in recent weeks over security issues have handed the United States an opportunity to reassert itself — one the Obama administration has been keen to take advantage of.

    Washington is leaping into the middle of heated territorial disputes between China and Southeast Asian nations despite stern Chinese warnings that it mind its own business. The United States is carrying out naval exercises with South Korea in order to help Seoul rebuff threats from North Korea even though China is denouncing those exercises, saying that they intrude on areas where the Chinese military operates.

    Meanwhile, China’s increasingly tense standoff with Japan over a Chinese fishing trawler captured by Japanese ships in disputed waters is pushing Japan back under the American security umbrella.

    The arena for these struggles is shifting this week to a summit meeting of world leaders at the United Nations. Wen Jiabao, the Chinese prime minister, has refused to meet with his Japanese counterpart, Naoto Kan, and on Tuesday he threatened Japan with “further action” if it did not unconditionally release the fishing captain.

    On Friday, President Obama is expected to meet with Southeast Asian leaders and promise that the United States is willing to help them peacefully settle South China Sea territorial disputes with China.

    “The U.S. has been smart,” said Carlyle A. Thayer, a professor at the Australian Defense Force Academy who studies security issues in Asia. “It has done well by coming to the assistance of countries in the region.”

    “All across the board, China is seeing the atmospherics change tremendously,” he added. “The idea of the China threat, thanks to its own efforts, is being revived.”

    Asserting Chinese sovereignty over borderlands in contention — everywhere from Tibet to Taiwan to the South China Sea — has long been the top priority for Chinese nationalists, an obsession that overrides all other concerns. But this complicates China’s attempts to present the country’s rise as a boon for the whole region and creates wedges between China and its neighbors.

    Nothing underscores that better than the escalating diplomatic conflict between China and Japan over the detention of the Chinese fishing captain, Zhan Qixiong, by the Japanese authorities, who say the captain rammed two Japanese vessels around the Senkaku or Diaoyu Islands in the East China Sea. The islands are administered by Japan but claimed by both Japan and China.

    The current dispute may strengthen the military alliance between the United States and Japan, as did an incident last April when a Chinese helicopter buzzed a Japanese destroyer. Such confrontations tend to remind Japanese officials, who have suggested that they need to refocus their foreign policy on China instead of America, that they rely on the United States to balance an unpredictable China, analysts say.

    “Japan will have no choice but to further go into America’s arms, to further beef up the U.S.-Japan alliance and its military power,” said Huang Jing, a scholar of the Chinese military at the National University of Singapore.

    In July, Southeast Asian nations, particularly Vietnam, applauded when Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said that the United States was willing to help mediate a solution to disputes that those nations had with China over the South China Sea, which is rich in oil, natural gas and fish. China insists on dealing with Southeast Asian nations one on one, but Mrs. Clinton said the United States supported multilateral talks. Freedom of navigation in the sea is an American national interest, she said.

    President Obama meets on Friday with leaders from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or Asean. The Associated Press reported that the participants would issue a joint statement opposing the “use or threat of force by any claimant attempting to enforce disputed claims in the South China Sea.” The statement is clearly aimed at China, which has seized Vietnamese fishing vessels in recent years and detained their crews.

    On Tuesday, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Jiang Yu, criticized any attempt at mediation by the United States. “We firmly oppose any country having nothing to do with the South China Sea issue getting involved in the dispute,” she said at a news conference in Beijing.

    China has also been objecting to American plans to hold military exercises with South Korea in the Yellow Sea, which China claims as its exclusive military operations zone. The United States and South Korea want to send a stern message to North Korea over what Seoul says was the torpedoing last March of a South Korean warship by a North Korean submarine. China’s belligerence serves only to reinforce South Korea’s dependence on the American military.

    American officials are increasingly concerned about the modernization of China’s navy and its long-range abilities, as well as China’s growing assertiveness in the surrounding waters. In March, a Chinese official told White House officials that the South China Sea was part of China’s “core interest” of sovereignty, similar to Tibet and Taiwan, an American official said in an interview at the time. American officials also object to China’s telling foreign oil companies not to work with Vietnam on developing oil fields in the South China Sea.

    Some Chinese military leaders and analysts see an American effort to contain China. Feng Zhaokui, a Japan scholar at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said in an article on Tuesday in The Global Times, a populist newspaper, that the United States was trying to “nurture a coalition against China.”

    In August, Rear Adm. Yang Yi wrote an editorial for The PLA Daily, published by the Chinese Army, in which he said that on one hand, Washington “wants China to play a role in regional security issues.”

    “On the other hand,” he continued, “it is engaging in an increasingly tight encirclement of China and is constantly challenging China’s core interests.”

    Asian countries suspicious of Chinese intentions see Washington as a natural ally. In April, the incident involving the Chinese helicopter and Japanese destroyer spooked many in Japan, making them feel vulnerable at a time when Yukio Hatoyama, then the prime minister, had angered Washington with his pledges to relocate a Marine Corps air base away from Okinawa.

    His successor, Mr. Kan, has sought to smooth out ties with Washington and has emphasized that the alliance is the cornerstone of Japanese foreign policy.

    “Insecurity about China’s presence has served as a wake-up call on the importance of the alliance,” said Fumiaki Kubo, a professor of public policy at the University of Tokyo.

    Michael Wines contributed reporting from Beijing, and Martin Fackler from Tokyo. Zhang Jing contributed research.
    TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

    Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

    D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

  • #2
    Is china a Communist Country?

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    • #3
      Yuh nuh see nutten yet.

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      • #4
        preements a gwaan

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        • #5
          China will never surpass the USA as a superpower. That is my opinion. They are not innovative enough, their population is too big, the US economy is too big and flexible, and the USA has the best schools and brains in the world, plain and simple.
          When you look at say total energy consumption, people start to fret that China is catching up, but that is a big joke. The per capita energy consumption of the Chinese is tiny compared to the USA. The goods that China makes are mostly consumed in the USA, who can more than easily manufacture these same goods themselves if push comes to shove. The Chinese have not invented anything, but simply are capitalizing on tecnology transfer, illegally and legally, from the west, mostly the USA. This pipeline can be turned off at anytime. Quite frankly, I think the USA can embark on more stringent enforcement against unfair trade practices by the Chinese without any adverse effect. The Chinese know who is buttering their bread and will blink. On the military front, the Chinese is no match, and will be no match for the forseeable future. So I think the Americans have nothing to worry about. Sure you are going to get a few, or even many superrich Chinese, but that alone does make a superpower. The same was said about the Japanese back in the 80s, when everybody started learning Japanese. The Indians who are far more innovative than the Chinese seem to also be far more incompetent. Just look at the footbridge near the Commonwealth games venue. So they wont catch up any time soon.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Reggaedoc View Post
            China will never surpass the USA as a superpower. That is my opinion. They are not innovative enough, their population is too big, the US economy is too big and flexible, and the USA has the best schools and brains in the world, plain and simple.
            When you look at say total energy consumption, people start to fret that China is catching up, but that is a big joke. The per capita energy consumption of the Chinese is tiny compared to the USA. The goods that China makes are mostly consumed in the USA, who can more than easily manufacture these same goods themselves if push comes to shove. The Chinese have not invented anything, but simply are capitalizing on tecnology transfer, illegally and legally, from the west, mostly the USA. This pipeline can be turned off at anytime. Quite frankly, I think the USA can embark on more stringent enforcement against unfair trade practices by the Chinese without any adverse effect. The Chinese know who is buttering their bread and will blink. On the military front, the Chinese is no match, and will be no match for the forseeable future. So I think the Americans have nothing to worry about. Sure you are going to get a few, or even many superrich Chinese, but that alone does make a superpower. The same was said about the Japanese back in the 80s, when everybody started learning Japanese. The Indians who are far more innovative than the Chinese seem to also be far more incompetent. Just look at the footbridge near the Commonwealth games venue. So they wont catch up any time soon.
            Your viewpoint is held by many...but no one knows what will happen in the future. However consider this:

            1. For much of recorded history the Chinese have been the leading civilization on the planet... History being cyclical..who is to say that they cannot one day return to that status? We in the Western orbit tend to get bamboozled by their power all around us & influenced by their one sided media matrix.

            2. China and the US are on opposite growth trajectories...one is a mature power in relative decline with low growth rates of 2-3%...the other is a re-emerging giant which has averaged about 8% growth over 25 years.

            China's per capita GNP is roughly on par with Jamaica at about US$4000+ so the upside potential is huge. If they can continue the same growth path for 20 years (debatable) by 2030 their economy will be larger than the US... then all bets will be off and the world will be a different place.

            Already China is the world's & the US's largest creditor and saves 40+% of their income, is the manufacturer to the world and is exporting capital everywhere...looking for strategic raw materials and strategic positioning...including virtual control of the Panama Canal which is a chokehold for the US.

            3. Comparisons with Japan in the 1980s are understandable but misplaced. Japan is occupied territory for the US since 1945...US troops and bases provide Japan's defence and the Japanese are not allowed to have a strong military..plus for every Japanese there are 10 Chineyman

            China in contrast is armed to the teeth and has the ability to essentially destroy the US with nuclear weapons...their military issues veiled nuclear threats occasionally when riled up...it's just not widely reported.

            Yes they steal technology ...but so did the US until they were able to develop their own... China will follow the same path as no great power can afford to be too dependent on it's adversary for strategic resources...common ting dat.

            4, If the US could easily turn off the technology & trade pipeline...impossible due to globalization & the WTO...they would have done it already. The fact is that a trade war would damage both..they are interdependent.


            We need to wake up to the fact that the only thing constant in the world is change.
            TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

            Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

            D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

            Comment


            • #7
              How you nuh tell we bout their trickle down policy where only the communist and the capitalist have most of the wealth even with the massive growth.
              • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Assasin View Post
                How you nuh tell we bout their trickle down policy where only the communist and the capitalist have most of the wealth even with the massive growth.
                No problem if you wish to be further educated on the subject
                TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

                Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

                D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

                Comment


                • #9
                  Never is a very long time boss. Unless never for you means "in your lifetime".

                  150 years ago the USA was in a mess, going into a Civil War that many did not think they would survive as a country. What is 150 years in the history of man?

                  They are not innovative enough, their population is too big, the US economy is too big and flexible, and the USA has the best schools and brains in the world, plain and simple
                  Wow. I guess that explains why USA post-grad programs are full of Asian immigrants.
                  "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    yuh seeit...
                    TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

                    Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

                    D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

                    Comment

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