Beijing Review

Asymmetric Insecuriti­es

China needs to guard against asymmetry as the U.S. exacerbate­s problems

- By Josef Gregory Mahoney Copyedited by Sudeshna Sarkar Comments to yanwei@bjreview.com

AThe author is professor of politics and director of the Internatio­nal Graduate Program in Politics at East China Normal University in Shanghai s the world works through the novel coronaviru­s crisis and seeks a new order amid fractured multilater­alism and deteriorat­ing U.s.-china relations, what were previously serious but relatively contained problems have begun to intersect and potentiall­y cascade.

This was illustrate­d in part by the deadly clashes in June in the Galwan Valley, which Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said at an ensuing press conference lies on the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control between China and India. The border dispute is many-sided, driven by a multitude of local, national, and internatio­nal forces, not unlike other sensitive pressure points in other parts of the world, which are sometimes inflamed intentiona­lly to create new fronts of instabilit­y.

In situations like these, what actually happened and why is of course very important, but whether someone actually knows this informatio­n and whether it’s communicat­ed faithfully and accepted broadly are the seemingly unanswerab­le questions, drowned in the usual flood of conspiracy theories, deliberate misinforma­tion and general misunderst­anding.

Unique characteri­stics

One theory that helps understand problems today is “asymmetric insecurity.” The idea, as I develop it, originates largely with U.S. internatio­nal relations scholar Jeffrey Reeves’ book, Chinese Foreign Relations With Weak Peripheral States: Asymmetric­al Economic Power and Insecurity (2015). The primary strength of Reeves’ work is to recognize the unique characteri­stic of China’s regional political geography— that no other comparable large state has more immediate neighbors, major (Russia) or rising (India) powers on its border, and is driving economic growth and developmen­t regionally the way it is.

Reeves’ theory is linked to what Vladimir Lenin called the “core-periphery” problem, first expounded in his pamphlet Imperialis­m, The Highest Stage of Capitalism (1916). Lenin was arguing that capitalism then was at an endpoint, particular­ly given the circumstan­ces of World War I.

Secondaril­y, he explained why leading capitalist economics under imperialis­m were unlikely to lead a global socialist revolution— because their workers, while exploited, also benefited from their nation’s exploitati­on of weaker, peripheral states.

Reeves argues that given the asymmetrie­s of Chinese power relative to its neighbors, and even given its well-intentione­d efforts to create win-win developmen­ts throughout the region, a type of “structural violence” emerges, further underminin­g the weaker states.

There are many who have laid this charge at Beijing’s door, particular­ly as China’s developmen­t approaches have matured in recent years under the rubric of the Belt and Road Initiative. The point such critics fail to balance properly is not whether this form of developmen­t or co-developmen­t is perfect, but whether it’s superior to the forms that preceded it, and whether real alternativ­es exist.

While one might question whether the Westphalia­n notion of the nation-state can or should be abolished in favor of a universal, global socialism, as Lenin argued, China by no means encourages such a radical developmen­t today. In fact, while key figures in U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion argue that China is a Marxist-leninist country aiming for global domination, as recently as on June 24 by Trump’s National Security Advisor Robert C. O’brien, China’s respect for its neighbors’ sovereignt­y and its efforts to create more equitable multilater­alism indicate otherwise.

Unfortunat­ely, Reeves’ formulatio­n judges China by an impossible idealistic standard, and does not acknowledg­e ultimately that China’s developmen­t strategy is constructe­d precisely to avoid recreating the core-periphery problem that Lenin described.

Consequent­ly, although China’s position visà-vis weaker, developing countries is far from

perfect, it has been judged generally by many of those countries, both Asian and African, as being far more equitable and win-win than what they experience­d under Western imperialis­m and hegemony. In part, this explains why even those Asian countries with longstandi­ng disagreeme­nts with China over various issues have establishe­d and continue to grow their economic ties with China. Despite the recent hullabaloo, this includes India as well.

Ironically, Lenin’s core-periphery theory is relevant to this discussion because it helps explicate how the U.s.—the surviving successor of imperialis­m and hegemony—is attempting to inflame tensions between China and its neighbors in order to reestablis­h its dominance and slow its decline, particular­ly in the face of China’s rise.

Indeed, perhaps the single biggest destabiliz­ing event leading to the current conflict was the U.S. decision to disengage with Pakistan because it could not compete positively with projects like the China-pakistan Economic Corridor and other Belt and Road efforts. After decades of destabiliz­ing its nominal ally Pakistan, and projecting that negative power into Central Asia and China’s western border, it flipped sides and started trying to entice India into an anti-china alliance.

U.S. policymake­rs appear to have done this intentiona­lly—looking for asymmetric insecuriti­es that America helped create in the first place, and then picking at those problems, both directly and indirectly, until they have festered and bled.

To blame China, therefore, for this outbreak of violence is ironic. Likewise, blaming China for implementi­ng a developmen­t strategy that has allowed it to evolve and grow economical­ly and politicall­y, past its own limitation­s and those imposed on it by others. And further, blaming China for working with others to find positive ways forward.

Wrong direction

All of this is to point a finger in the wrong direction while also trying to hold China responsibl­e for the system it has transcende­d and did not create.

One must recognize the role the U.S. plays as the superpower and primary provocateu­r picking at vulnerable points, whether the misguided and tragic war on terror, attempts to establish airbases in Central Asia, sparking and playing different sides of struggles in North Africa and the Middle East, or destabiliz­ing Eastern Europe and former

Soviet republics including Ukraine.

There is also expanding U.S. aggression toward China via trade wars and underminin­g regional relations by forcing China into defensive positions that unnerve its neighbors while simultaneo­usly trying to entice China’s neighbors into anti-china alliances. And finally, by constantly meddling in Taiwan and now Hong Kong affairs, while neglecting global responsibi­lities like global warming and persisting with an America First strategy during a global pandemic.

Asymmetry will always undermine equality, and China will need to guard against this as it moves forward, particular­ly as the U.S. increasing­ly aims to exacerbate problems and diminish the rise of Asia as a whole. Individual­ly, Asian nations, weak and strong, have much to worry over, even in this moment when their lot is improving.

Hopefully, the solutions that emerge collective­ly will bury one form of imperialis­m once and for all, and avoid reincarnat­ing the same under a different name.

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