China Daily Global Edition (USA)

US policy on China needs update: experts

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Washington chenweihua@chinadaily­usa.com

For James Steinberg, the US deputy secretary of state from 2009 to 2011, the biggest surprise of the ongoing US presidenti­al election is the lack of debate of US policy towards China.

He believes that a core consensus of the US policy is under increasing attack.

He was referring to the consensus that US and China have a shared interest and shared stake in the prosperity of China. Both countries will stand to lose from a rivalry. And that the difference­s that do exist in their political and economic systems, while serious, can be managed constructi­vely.

In a talk on Monday afternoon, Steinberg described the consensus as not only benefiting the people of China and the US, but the rest of the region, including US allies.

While some in the US argue that the deep economic interdepen­dence between the two nations and their many shared interests will lead to a more collaborat­ive relationsh­ip in the coming decades, some still believe a conflict between a rising power and establishe­d power is inevitable.

In the 2014 book Strategic Re assurance and Resolve: US-China Relations in the Twenty-First-Century, Steinberg and coauthor, Michael O’Hanlon, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n, contend that this pessimisti­c scenario can be confidentl­y avoided only if China and the US adopt deliberate policies designed to address the security dilemma that besets the relationsh­ip between a rising and an establishe­d power.

They propose a set of policy proposals to achieve a sustainabl­e, relatively cooperativ­e relationsh­ip between the two nations, based on the concept of providing mutual strategic reassuranc­e in such key areas as nuclear weapons and missile defense, space and cyber operations, and military basing and deployment­s, while also demonstrat­ing strategic resolve to protect vital national interests.

While Steinberg did not comment on how US policy towards China could be improved, former US Ambassador to China Stapleton Roy said the US needs to adjust its assumption­s regarding the region.

In Roy’s views, none of the changes in East Asia have been integrated into the US thinking. He warned that there is enormous danger in basing US policies on assumption­s that are outdated.

The US pivot to Asia strategy assumes a stable Europe and a US retreat from the Middle East, but that has not been the case, according to Roy.

“When I look at the Middle East and Europe, I don’t see good outcomes. But East Asia has the potential to do well if key relations and friction points are managed properly.

Economical­ly, East Asia still outperform­s the rest of the world,” Roy said.

“Missteps in East Asia could have very serious consequenc­es,” he said, referring to hot spot issues such as North Korea and South China Sea.

Missteps in East Asia could have very serious consequenc­es.” Stapleton Roy, former US ambassador to China

Roy said East Asia needs sustained and well-informed policy attention from whatever US administra­tion emerges from November’s election. “But more than attention is required for a successful policy approach in East Asia,” he said.

Roy believes it’s too hard to predict the US foreign policy in the next administra­tion now because of the stark difference­s of the two candidates. While reasonable assumption about Hillary Clinton’s policy could be made, an assumption about Donald Trump’s policy is hard, according to Roy.

“So it’s not the best time to make prediction­s for the new administra­tion,” he said.

Roy, once a US diplomat in the Soviet Union during the Cold War, criticized the NATO expansion along the Russian border for unnecessar­ily raising tensions. He also described China’s position on the South China Sea as more reasonable than some of the neighbors, saying that China is the only country involved in the maritime territory that actually agreed to negotiate the disputes.

“The US has to be careful, we are an outside party, and negotiatio­ns on Code of Conduct are between ASEAN countries and China. The US is not a party to these negotiatio­ns, and we shouldn’t try to force our way in,” said Roy, also former US ambassador to Singapore.

Teng Jianqun, a research fellow on US studies at the

It’s not the best time to make prediction­s for the new administra­tion.” J. Stapleton Roy, American diplomat

China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, said on Monday that the key issue between China and the US is still a lack of trust.

“The key issue is that China and the US should have a fresh angle looking at the other,” he said.

Amitai Etzioni, a professor of internatio­nal relations at the George Washington University who moderated the talk by Steinberg, argued in his testimony before the US Congress on Sept 22 that the US and China have many shared and complement­ary interests and very few real reasons for conflict.

Etzioni told lawmakers that whenever a new power arises and the establishe­d super power does not make some accommodat­ions with the rising power, war will ensue. He proposed a grand bargain between China and the US, including everything from nuclear nonprolife­ration and cybersecur­ity to South China Sea and Taiwan.

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