Summary: Will China become a superpower in the next decade? The US military describes China as a more than a rival – it is a looming threat, and a reason to fund our massive military build-up. Here is a different answer that you won’t see in the news. It would ruin the narrative.
For the past decade or so, China has been widely seen as the next superpower – replacing an America in decline. This story justifies the next wave of US military spending. As described in this article, that might be a myth.
“China’s Not a Superpower by Minxin Pei.
In The Diplomat, January 2010.
The author is a Prof of Government at Claremont McKenna College. His latest books are China’s Trapped Transition: The Limits of Developmental Autocracy
“With the United States apparently in terminal decline as the world’s sole superpower, the fashionable question to ask is which country will be the new superpower? The near-unanimous answer, it seems, is China. Poised to overtake Japan as the world’s 2nd largest economy in 2010, the Middle Kingdom has all the requisite elements of power – an extensive industrial base, a strong state, a nuclear-armed military, a continental-sized territory, a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council and a large population base – to be considered as Uncle Sam’s most eligible and logical equal.
“Indeed, the perception that China has already become the world’s second superpower has grown so strong that some in the West have proposed a G2 – the United States and China – as a new partnership to address the world’s most pressing problems.
“To be sure, the perception of China as the next superpower is grounded, at least in part, in the country’s amazing rise over the last three decades. Powered by near-double-digit economic growth since 1979, China has transformed itself from an isolated, impoverished, and demoralized society into a confident, prospering global trading power. With a GDP of $4.4 trillion and total foreign trade of $2.6 trillion in 2008, China has firmly established itself as a premier world economic powerhouse.
“Yet, despite such undeniable achievements, it may be too soon to regard China as the world’s next superpower.”
This is too mild a forecast. For the rest of the story (as Paul Harvey used to say), see this analysis. After eight years, it looks prescient.
Will China become a superpower?
Guest article by Young J. Kim (Captain, US Army, retired).
Originally posted here on 9 September 2011.
Introduction.
Pei is not discounting what China has accomplished, many notable inventions and scientific discoveries range from the Chinese be the first to develop gun powder weapons and the first to discover planetary motion 500 years before Brahe and Kepler. However, there are reasons that China didn’t expand into world influence. These are the same factors that had China not expand beyond itself, unlike Europe, despite having built ocean-going vessels that could sail halfway around the world, predating Columbus by almost a century. China has too many internal problems for it to ever commit to a path of global influence.
All of the problems listed by Pei are nothing new to the Chinese experience. Central to all of this is what to do about the hundreds of millions of peasants. Ever since the first Chinese imperial dynasty, this problem has plagued the central government. China as a civilization could function as a civilization, but it is too large and too centralized to govern and manage effectively.
China’s history, and its problems today.
Nearly every single dynastic change was the result of peasant revolts; foreign invasions, for the most part, toppling what was already unstable. Even as recently as the final dynasty of the Qing the Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864) saw more Chinese dead during this period than the Japanese ever inflicted, with estimates up to 30-40 Chinese million dead. Throughout Chinese history, nearly all of its bloodiest conflicts coincided with dynastic changes. The CCP (Chinese Communist Party) of today has not negated these same factors that plagued Chinese civilization repeatedly throughout history. We should not expect that the Chinese could escape their history any more than we could.
So the question is asking why does China seem to want to assert itself now? That I believe is tied to a centuries-long transition that only recently the Chinese had caught up. Wealth no longer comes from trade along the trade routes of Central Asia but through maritime shipping. This has only made geopolitical conditions for the Chinese even worse off.
Policies attempting to push economic development into the interior of China won’t work due to unnecessary transportation costs to the coastal regions. Their infrastructure in those regions is still undeveloped. China can’t develop them unless they build up a strong domestic economy to support its construction. For China to do this will require that they make that transition from export to a domestic economy. Japan is the only country in the regions with a sizable domestic economy that self-generates its development. Japan, as well as some other countries in Asia, had to make this rather painful transition where some even now have not completed.
Also, China has internal ethnic tensions, over-centralization of the federal government, massive corruption, massive pollution. There are many reasons why China won’t become a superpower in the foreseeable future.
China and its neighbors.
China may be a security concern for the countries in Northeast and Southeast Asia, but nothing they cannot manage on their own. These countries can hold China at bay within their respective regions.
In Northeast Asia alone the Koreans and Japanese combined have more than enough assets for deterrence. If only the Japanese eliminate their outdated stance on pacifism. There is no need for the US to continual subsidizing their security at our expense. Northeast Asia has the technological and economic base to build and develop as a regional security bloc, but there is no incentive so long as the US remains – especially if we continually allow for access to our markets at an advantage.
China poses no existential threat to India. Why try to invade and conquer, only to rule an additional billion or so people when you are having great difficulty ruling your own billion or so citizens?
Southeast Asia? That is an area of interest for nearly all the countries in Asia. We already have the Japanese Maritime Self Defense Force {see Wikipedia} sending ship deployments from the TGT Triangle (Tokyo, Guam, Taiwan) with no fewer than 65 vessels to SE Asia and as far away to East Africa.
For Vietnam, Communism was the vehicle for anti-colonialism and independence as against the French and later American. China has subjected Vietnam to various pressures for centuries. Vietnamese history is littered with many rebellions for independence and direct state-to-state conflicts consistently throughout its history. The Sino-Vietnamese War repeats old conflicts, when Vietnam refused Chinese reassertion into their region.
That being said, the Chinese never penetrated into SE Asia beyond Vietnam. China has never successfully invaded Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, or even Burma (Burma repelled China’s small invasion force in 1765). China successfully invaded Vietnam. This had much to do with Chinese interests of Hainan Island – adjacent to Vietnam, Chinese territory for many centuries. During the Ming Dynasty, China made its farthest penetration into Vietnam. Even then China didn’t penetrate much beyond Northern Vietnam, leaving the previously mentioned SE Asian countries pretty much alone. China’s interest has always been around Hainan Island. The conflict over the waters in that region dates back centuries.
Today other SE Asian countries watch China’s efforts to secure the ocean trade routes to which it is absolutely dependent upon. Previously there had been no problems between Malaysia and China, or Indonesia and China. Now they will probably develop a shared interest against China (aside from ethnic Chinese being so dominant in the commerce within those countries). Just as it is the case in NE Asia, SE Asia having a shared security interest is also economically capable. ASEAN combined would have the 8th or 9th largest economy in the world. Shared interests with Japan and Korea for securing their commercial access makes all of the countries pretty much on board with how to deal with China.
China and the US.
China is not an existential threat to the US, nor will it ever be. The preferred strategy should be to end the China threat industry and all of its nonsense, scale back and reduce our forces, but seek an opportunity to sell and co-develop weapons with those countries. Our position should be to never get involved with their disputes, rather trade with them. We can always tailor what we sell to whom we sell and with that finally balance our deficits in trade, our governmental budget, and our diplomatic reputation.
Conclusion.
No Asian continental power could subdue Southeast Asia fully. Not even the Mongols succeeded in their attempts. The relative power positions of China now is not that much different than in the past. The only major and permanent change to Asia is that Japan became, and remains, a major power.
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Other perspectives on China’s rise
How does China see its role in the world? See the films Wolf Warrior
See these articles from 5 – 10 years ago about China’s path to becoming a superpower. Time has proven they were correct.
- “China: The Mythification of it being an emergent superpower” by Dr. Subhash Kapila at the South Asia Analysis Group, 2008.
- “The China Superpower Hoax” by Steven Hill) at TruthDig, 2010.
- “Why the West Rules – For Now” by Ian Morris at The Long Now Foundation, 2011. He is an archaeologist, historian, and Prof of Classics at Stanford. His splendid book is Why the West Rules – for Now: The Patterns of History, and What They Reveal About the Future
(2010). - “Henry Kissinger: China Won’t Be Next Superpower“, an interview in The Canadian Press, June 2011.
Current news about China’s economy shows that Kim’s concerns were well-founded.
- Long-standing concerns continue about China’s long debt-fueled expansion: “In inland Chinese province, property bubble haunts dreams of prosperity” at Reuters, 20 May 2019.
- Lost of concerns in the most recent World Bank report about China, 8 April 2019.
- The gap between the poor western provinces and the rich coasts continues: “How China’s government should help its backward regions” in The Economist, 8 June 2019.
To see how China sees America, read about this important speech by Major General Qiao Liang of the PLA.
- A look at the American Empire.
- Judging America’s leadership of the world economy.
- A ruthless America striving to contain his nation’s growth.
About the author
Young J. Kim is a former U. S. Army captain with tours in Korea and two in Iraq. He holds a masters degree in defense and strategic studies from Missouri State U. Now he is Chief Technology Officer for Burke Macgregor Group (“develops innovative solutions to achieve national security objectives through achievable transformation”). Also see these articles …
- “Air-Sea Battle: Something’s missing” by him and Douglas Macgregor (Colonel, US Army, retired) in Armed Forces Journal, April 2012 – “Without ground forces, the U.S. cannot counter Chinese aggression.”
- “More Guns, Fewer Generals” by him and Daniel L. Davis (Lt. Colonel, US Army) at The American Conservative (March 2014) – “Reducing combat capabilities isn’t the only way to save the military money.”
For More Information
Ideas! For shopping ideas, see my recommended books and films at Amazon.
If you liked this post, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. See all posts about China, about trade, about globalization, and especially these…
- Will China collapse? – Debunking the doomsters, 2009.
- A revolution is not a dinner party. Thoughts about the future of China, 2009.
- China and America have several similar weaknesses. Our hubris prevents us from seeing this. 2011.
- What China Wants Us to Understand about China’s Rise – by Franz Gayl (Major, USMC, retired), 2014.
- Will China’s Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank begin a new world order? — It’s more important than the skeptics believe, less threatening than the doomsters say, 2015.
- China takes the lead in supercomputing while America sleeps, 2016.
- Stratfor: China builds a new Silk Road for the 21st century, 2016.
- China builds a new world in which *it* is the great power, 2017.
- About Trump’s mad trade war with China, May 2019.
For more about rising China
China’s Asian Dream:
empire building along the New Silk Road .
By Tom Miller, senior Asia analyst at GaveKal (2017).
From the publisher …
“Under Xi, China is pursuing an increasingly ambitious foreign policy with the aim of restoring its historical status as the dominant power in Asia. From the Mekong Basin to the Central Asian steppe, the country is wooing its neighbors with promises of new roads, railways, dams, and power grids. Chinese trade and investment presents huge opportunities for China’s neighbors, and its ability to build much-needed infrastructure could assist in the development of some of the world’s poorest countries.
“Yet China’s rise also threatens to reduce its neighbours to the status of exploited vassals. In Vietnam and Myanmar, resentment of Chinese encroachment has already incited anti-Chinese protests, and many countries in the region are seeking to counterbalance its influence by turning to the US and Japan. Combining a concise overview of the situation with on-the-ground reportage from over seven countries, China’s Asian Dream offers a fresh perspective on one of the most important questions of our time: what does China’s rise mean for the future of Asia and of the world?”
