Study Material: Toward an Asian Order: Confrontation or Partnership?
Source Information: This study material has been compiled from a copy-pasted text and an audio lecture transcript.
🌍 Introduction: Rebalancing World Order in Asia
The 21st century witnesses a significant rebalancing of global power, with Asian states, particularly China, playing an increasingly central role. This shift challenges traditional notions of international order, especially the Westphalian system, and raises critical questions about whether the future will be characterized by confrontation or partnership. Asian nations, largely "emerging" or "postcolonial," share a drive to assert national identity and overcome colonial legacies. Unlike Europe's historical emphasis on maintaining equilibrium, many Asian states are driven by a dynamic sense of "rising," leading to a volatile regional order despite commitments to "non-zero-sum" diplomacy. The proliferation of advanced military technology further compounds the risks of miscalculation.
🇨🇳 China's Historical and Modern Trajectory in World Order
China's journey from ancient civilization to modern great power status is unique, profoundly shaping its approach to international relations.
📚 The Sinocentric Tribute System (Pre-20th Century)
For millennia, China operated under a distinct world order concept, far removed from Westphalian ideas of sovereign equality.
- Concept of "All Under Heaven": China viewed itself as the "Middle Kingdom," the sole sovereign government and civilized center of the world, with its Emperor as a cosmic link between human and divine.
- Universal Hierarchy: World order was seen as a hierarchy, not an equilibrium of states. Other societies were in a tributary relationship, striving towards Chinese civilization but never achieving equality.
- Diplomacy as Deference: Diplomacy involved ceremonial affirmations of assigned places in the global hierarchy, managed by the Ministry of Rituals and Office of Border Affairs, not bargaining between equals.
- Goal: To foster deference and psychological dominance through cultural achievements, rather than military conquest or economic exploitation.
- Example: The "five baits" strategy used by the Han Dynasty to manage Xiongnu tribes involved corrupting their senses with luxury goods and imperial favor, rather than direct military confrontation.
- Example: The "kowtow" ritual symbolized voluntary deference to the Emperor's superior authority.
- Cultural Assimilation: China expanded by "osmosis," assimilating conquerors like the Mongols and Manchus into its core culture, rather than exporting its political system.
⚔️ Encounter with the West
The arrival of Western powers, with their own sense of cultural superiority and Westphalian system, was seen by China as an "assault."
- Rejection of Western Diplomacy: Early Western envoys, like George Macartney, were dismissed, as China saw no need for reciprocal diplomacy or trade beyond its existing, limited system.
- Opium Wars & Forced Integration: Western powers, particularly Britain, forced China into the international system through military defeats, notably over the opium trade.
- Lingering Resentment: China's reluctant acquiescence to the Westphalian system was born of military pressure, not conviction, leading to a deep-seated ambivalence about rules it did not help create.
📈 Modern China: Revolution and Re-emergence
- Mao Zedong's "Continuous Revolution": After the 1949 Communist revolution, Mao sought to dismantle old orders (Western, Soviet, and traditional Chinese), emphasizing "disequilibrium" as a path to higher development and asserting China's unique revolutionary moral authority.
- Deng Xiaoping's Reforms: Post-Mao, Deng initiated economic reforms and opened China to the world, leading to rapid growth and integration into international institutions, albeit with a continued sense of historical grievance regarding rule-making.
- Current Global Role: China now seeks a central role in international rule-making, combining its ancient civilizational legacy with modern great-power status.
🇺🇸 The United States' Evolving Concept of World Order
The U.S. has profoundly shaped the contemporary world order while exhibiting a paradoxical ambivalence towards its participation.
✨ American Exceptionalism & Universal Values
- "Empire for Liberty": From its inception, the U.S. saw itself as unique, an "empire for liberty" with a moral obligation to spread its values globally.
- "City Upon a Hill": Early American leaders, like John Winthrop, envisioned the U.S. as an example for all nations, a "city upon a hill" demonstrating the possibilities of freedom and self-governance.
- Universal Principles: The conviction that American principles are universally applicable implies that other systems are less legitimate, creating a latent adversarial element in international relations.
🌊 Early Foreign Policy: Isolationism & Expansion
- Geographic Advantage: Protected by two oceans, the U.S. initially viewed foreign policy as an optional, episodic activity, focusing on domestic consolidation.
- Monroe Doctrine (1823): Declared the Western Hemisphere off-limits to foreign colonization, asserting U.S. dominance in its immediate region.
- Manifest Destiny: Territorial expansion across North America was framed as a divinely ordained spread of liberty, not traditional imperialism.
🛡️ Theodore Roosevelt: Geopolitical Realism
Theodore Roosevelt was the first U.S. President to systematically engage with America's global role through a geopolitical lens.
- Balance of Power: Advocated for the U.S. to act as a global balancer, similar to 19th-century Britain, maintaining equilibrium and preventing hegemony in strategic regions.
- "Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick": Believed that international law and diplomacy were ineffective without the backing of credible force.
- Example: The "Great White Fleet" global tour demonstrated U.S. naval power to deter potential adversaries like Japan, while maintaining diplomatic courtesy.
- Roosevelt Corollary (1904): Asserted the U.S. right to intervene preemptively in Latin American nations to remedy "wrongdoing or impotence," establishing a U.S. security umbrella.
- Russo-Japanese War Mediation (1905): Mediated the peace treaty to maintain a balance of power in Asia, earning him the Nobel Peace Prize.
🕊️ Woodrow Wilson: Moral Universalism & Collective Security
Wilson transformed American idealism into an operational program for global order, emphasizing moral principles over geopolitical balance.
- "Make the World Safe for Democracy": Advocated for a world order based on democratic institutions and universal values, believing autocracies caused conflict.
- Rejection of Balance of Power: Denounced traditional balance-of-power politics and "secret diplomacy" as causes of war.
- Self-Determination: Championed the right of nations to self-governance, believing it would lead to international harmony.
- League of Nations: Proposed a new international institution based on "collective security" – a "community of power" where all states would unite against aggression.
- Collective Security vs. Alliances: Collective security aims to oppose aggression universally, while alliances are agreements for specific threats. The League's failure highlighted the difficulty of achieving common action from varied national interests.
- Limitations: The League proved ineffective against aggressors (e.g., Japan in China, Italy in Abyssinia) due to vague definitions of aggression and reluctance for common action.
🤝 Franklin D. Roosevelt: Personal Diplomacy & Post-War Order
FDR, while building on Wilsonian principles, also emphasized personal trust and pragmatic management of international relations.
- Atlantic Charter (1941): Outlined principles for a post-war world, including self-determination, freedom from fear and want, and a system of general security, largely reflecting Wilsonian ideals.
- Trust in Personalities: FDR placed significant reliance on personal relationships, famously believing he could manage Stalin through goodwill and trust.
- "Four Policemen": Envisioned the U.S., Soviet Union, Britain, and China as major powers responsible for checking peace violations, a blend of power politics and collective security.
- Ideological Clash: Despite FDR's hopes, the Soviet Union's ideological conviction that capitalism inevitably led to war presented a fundamental challenge to a trust-based world order.
🤝 Sino-American Relations: Confrontation or Partnership?
The relationship between the U.S. and China is a critical determinant of 21st-century world order, marked by historical legacies and contrasting approaches.
- Divergent Approaches 📊
- U.S.: Pragmatic, seeks immediate solutions, focuses on "deliverable" items.
- China: Conceptual, focuses on evolutionary change, sets general principles.
- Sources of Tension ⚠️
- "Thucydides Trap": Historical pattern of conflict between rising and established powers, leading to mutual suspicion.
- Human Rights & Sovereignty: U.S. promotes liberal democracy and human rights globally; China prioritizes national sovereignty and views such promotion as interference.
- North Korea: A complex issue where both countries share the goal of denuclearization but face challenges in coordinating policy and managing the regime's audacity.
- Path Forward: Balance and Partnership 💡
- Both countries are indispensable pillars of world order, yet both have historically shown ambivalence towards the international system.
- A purely military approach to the East Asian balance risks rigid alignments and confrontation.
- The challenge is to combine a balance of power with a concept of partnership, integrating elements of cooperation into the modern balance.
- This requires restraint, agreement on norms, and a focus on political and diplomatic competition rather than military escalation.
- Goal: To foster constructive cooperation and build a more peaceful future, recognizing that no single country can fill the global leadership role alone.








