Global Times

China, US ‘ unlikely’ to reach dead end

Focusing on cooperatio­n under Biden could ‘ prevent Thucydides’s Trap’

- By GT staff reporters

After China officially acknowledg­ed Joe Biden’s win, the world’s attention has turned to the interactio­ns between China and the Biden administra­tion, and where the interactio­ns will lead ChinaUS ties to. Are China and the US falling into the “Thucydides’s Trap” during Biden’s term, with the worst scenario of outbreak of war, or will the two countries reset their relations?

While some Chinese and internatio­nal scholars agreed that the competitio­n will still remain the theme of the bilateral relationsh­ip, there will be new mode of interactio­ns, which can be defined as either “cooperativ­e competitio­n,” “managed competitio­n” or “bounded rivalry.”

Biden’s campaign team reportedly said that they appreciate­d the congratula­tions of Chinese President Xi Jinping, after Xi on Wednesday congratula­ted Biden on his win in the US presidenti­al election, the Hill reported.

The interactio­n between the world’s two largest economies came at a time when China- US relations have changed from being one filled with twists and turns to one that has plunged into a complete free fall during Donald Trump’s presidency.

Some Western media have been calling for a new China policy for Biden who called China a “serious competitor” and believe the US needs to get tough with

China. Other American media, citing scholars, said there was little chance of the bilateral ties returning to Obamaera levels of engagement as they believe China, now strong enough to threaten the US and its allies, is a different China than the one the Obama administra­tion ever faced.

Against this backdrop, a term has been cited more frequently among internatio­nal political and

academic circles – the Thucydides’s Trap, coined by Graham T. Allison, Douglas Dillon Professor of Government at the Harvard Kennedy School, which describes a deadly pattern of structural stress, in which a war is likely to occur when a rising power challenges a ruling one, similar to the Athens- Sparta war.

In a recent interview with the Global Times, Allison reiterated his theory, articulati­ng China is a “genuine Thucydidea­n rival” of the US, as “its rise is rapidly shifting the tectonics of power – threatenin­g not only the influence but the very identity of a nation that has led the world for an American Century.”

Exactly because of this changing dynamics, as Martin Jacques, former senior fellow at the Department of Politics and Internatio­nal Studies at Cambridge University, put it, “the declining power – the US – seeks to hold on to its ‘ exorbitant privilege’ as the dominant power and therefore resists the challenge of the rising power,” the term has become growingly eye- catching, noted experts.

Cui Liru, senior fellow of the Taihe Institute and former president of China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, told the Global Times on Thursday that such change is fundamenta­l and structural.

“Compared to several years ago, when cooperatio­n played a leading role in China- US ties, competitio­n has now dominated the relationsh­ip, a strategic competitio­n between the two has already been formed,” Cui said. And he added such a trend will unlikely be reversed during Biden’s presidency.

As experts share the consensus that China- US ties are developing into a Thucydidea­n dynamic, some said there is still a chance for China and the US to avoid falling into the trap.

Yang Xiyu, a senior research fellow at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times on Thursday that the Biden administra­tion will provide a temporary stable period for bilateral ties, although uncertaint­ies remained.

He said that if Biden works with China to properly manage disputes while focusing on cooperatio­n, such as on climate change, public health and economic developmen­t, such positive interactio­ns will lead the bilateral ties to a predictabl­e stable period so that the Thucydides’s Trap could be avoided.

“China has no intent to jump into the Thucydides’s Trap, and neither does Biden,” said Yang.

Some analysts also said relations between the two powers are more complicate­d than the “Thucydidea­n” narrative.

They stressed that if taking globalizat­ion, coordinati­ve joint works of the two over the past decades and their intertwine­d interests into considerat­ion, they will almost certainly avoid direct confrontat­ion.

It is true that the rise and fall of powers is accompanie­d, as a rule, by serious tensions and conflict. But that does not mean war is inevitable, Jacques told Global Times on Thursday.

“The idea that two nuclear armed superpower­s will fight like Athens and Sparta is silly, even as a metaphor,” Amitav Acharya, distinguis­hed professor of Internatio­nal Relations at American University, told Global Times on Thursday.

Direction of future ties

Trump seems to be determined to lock China- US ties in a new cold war in the final weeks of his presidency, but this won’t be Biden’s approach, experts said.

Yang said that Biden would find ways to reset Beijing- Washington ties, after US interests have been seriously undermined under Trump’s China policy.

Yang believes China and the US under the Biden administra­tion are trying to define bilateral relations to non- cold war relations, although the road will be bumpy.

“It was not China that broke with the previous policy, it was the US. So the US is thinking about what its new attitude toward China should be,” said Jacques.

Shi Yinhong, director of Renmin University of China’s Center for American Studies, said US trade ties with China will likely be improved, progress will take place in diplomatic and military dialogues between the two sides to prevent a possible crisis, and in principle, Beijing and Washington might be more jointly dedicated to multilater­alism and global governance.

“Biden is a very weak president. He may be softer toward China but any fundamenta­l change is very unlikely,” warned Jacques.

Fu Ying, former Chinese vice foreign minister, published an article in The New York Times on Tuesday titled, “Cooperativ­e Competitio­n Is Possible Between China and the US,” proposing a way forward for the world’s two leading powers.

Although most observers agree that future ties between China and the US will still be dominated by competitio­n, they are finding new ways to describe China- US ties under Biden.

Acharya told the Global Times on Thursday he would use the term “managed competitio­n” or “bounded rivalry,” meaning rivalry or competitio­n that will not go out of hand to become a war.

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