The Commercial Appeal

U.S. has dangerous disconnect with China

- WESLEY CLARK

President Barack Obama’s talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping should mark the United States’ true “pivot” to Asia — and it can’t come soon enough. China is more powerful than many Americans realize, and it is on a trajectory to become even more capable. At the same time, the Chinese may underestim­ate or misread us. Absent deeper understand­ings and greater cooperatio­n, that’s a potentiall­y dangerous combinatio­n.

China is a rising power, surging forward economical­ly year after year. Its $8 trillion economy is second only to the United States’ (almost $16 trillion) — but in terms of purchasing power, the two are much closer, and China is growing almost three times faster. Its leaders seem to think their country will soon overtake the United States. They look at U. S. unemployme­nt, slow growth and indebtedne­ss and see a declining economic superpower. The Chinese want their due, and they are growing impatient.

In Xi the Chinese have a leader who seems comfortabl­e handling the country’s political and economic developmen­t as well as its rapidly growing military capabiliti­es.

It is clear from top-level Chinese diplomatic visits to India and Pakistan this spring and China’s challenges in the South China Sea and near Japan that this generation of leaders will be more assertive. We should listen when they ask why the United States is trying to “contain” China or sends its airplanes to “provoke” Chinese radar. We should take note, too, when Chinese citizens ask why we “like” the Vietnamese and Japanese more than them. In a communist state where the media are controlled, opinions usually start at the top. These are the rumblings that presage a significan­t challenge.

China’s leaders have a strategy, and they are moving vigorously: procuring natural resources abroad, gathering technology, developing infrastruc­ture, managing urban growth and employment, building a university system and shifting developmen­t into China’s interior. Eventually, China will produce more for its markets, protect intellectu­al property and raise the value of its currency. It will encourage use of the renminbi as a global currency. Its leaders expect to resume China’s historic place at the center of world wealth, culture, technology and power.

Meanwhile, top Chinese officials don’t seem to understand the United States. They don’t travel here for leisure or business. De- spite their much-discussed cyber-penetratio­n of U.S. business, academia and government, official China listens through its own experience­s and culture. Its leaders don’t hear from our leaders about sweeping strategic visions, such as their own much-publicized five-year plans; to them, U.S. political debate looks like weakness and the free-market system lacks strategic direction, with individual businesses doing almost anything to advance quarterly earnings. They don’t understand why our young people aren’t more motivated educationa­lly. And in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, they underestim­ate the vast economic potential of the United States — the resources, people and incredible energy that an aroused America can bring to any challenge, particular­ly to our global leadership.

Such misunderst­andings not only hinder cooperatio­n, but also raise risks in any time of challenge. It is vital that the Obama-Xi talks include discussion of these differing perspectiv­es and take personal measure of the other’s character, style and resolve. These talks also provide an opportunit­y to recognize common interests, such as asymmetric­al trade, investment­s and exchanges. But areas of disagreeme­nt — the Middle East, North Korea, Africa — must also be discussed and markers put in place on issues such as freedom of the seas around China, cybersecur­ity, trade, investment, corruption and human rights.

No concrete results should be anticipate­d, or sought, yet. But a schedule should be crafted for frequent meetings, at various levels, on military, environmen­tal, commerce, technology, education and culture issues — and we should seek results. Treaties and written agreements matter less to the Chinese than do broad strategies and general understand­ings. Neverthele­ss, we must work to bring them toward the global architectu­re that the West has constructe­d in the course of more than a half-century. Wherever possible, we should agree and publish confidence­building measures. These will be important in deepening dialogue, promoting mutual understand­ing and shaping how China deals with the outer world.

There is no better means to resolve the myriad headline issues of the moment than longer-term strategic understand­ings. These could, and hopefully will, emerge from the Obama-Xi meetings. As the two greatest powers on Earth are already deeply entangled economical­ly and developing their militaries against each other, there is no time to waste. Wesley Clark, a retired Army general and former supreme allied commander of NATO, is a fellow at the Burkle Center for Internatio­nal Relations at UCLA. He wrote this for The Washington Post.

 ??  ?? SCOTT STANTIS IS EDITORIAL CARTOONIST FOR THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE.
SCOTT STANTIS IS EDITORIAL CARTOONIST FOR THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE.
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