China vs. America Managing the Next Clash of Civilizations - By Graham Allison
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As Americans
awaken to a rising China that now rivals the United States in every
arena, many seek comfort in the conviction that as China grows richer
and stronger, it will follow in the footsteps of Germany, Japan, and
other countries that have undergone profound transformations and emerged
as advanced liberal democracies. In this view, the magic cocktail of
globalization, market-based consumerism, and integration into the rule-based international order will
eventually lead China to become democratic at home and to develop into
what former U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick once
described as “a responsible stakeholder” abroad.
Samuel Huntington disagreed. In his essay “The Clash of Civilizations?,” published
in this magazine in 1993, the political scientist argued that, far from
dissolving in a global liberal world order, cultural fault lines would
become a defining feature of the post–Cold War world. Huntington’s
argument is remembered today primarily for its prescience in
spotlighting the divide between “Western and Islamic civilizations”—a
rift that was revealed most vividly by the 9/11 attacks and their
aftermath. But Huntington saw the gulf between the U.S.-led West and
Chinese civilization as just as deep, enduring, and consequential. As he
put it, “The very notion that there could be a ‘universal civilization’
is a Western idea, directly at odds with the particularism of most
Asian societies and their emphasis on what distinguishes one people from
another.”
The years since have
bolstered Huntington’s case. The coming decades will only strengthen it
further. The United States embodies what Huntington considered Western
civilization. And tensions between American and Chinese values,
traditions, and philosophies will aggravate the fundamental structural
stresses that occur whenever a rising power, such as China, threatens to
displace an established power, such as the United States.
The reason such shifts so often lead to conflict is Thucydides’ trap,
named after the ancient Greek historian who observed a dangerous
dynamic between a rising Athens and ruling Sparta. According to
Thucydides, “It was the rise of Athens, and the fear that this instilled
in Sparta, that made war inevitable.” Rising powers understandably feel
a growing sense of entitlement and demand greater influence and
respect. Established powers, faced with challengers, tend to become
fearful, insecure, and defensive. In such an environment,
misunderstandings are magnified, empathy remains elusive, and events and
third-party actions that would otherwise be inconsequential or
manageable can trigger wars that the primary players never wanted to
fight.
Americans see government as a necessary
evil and believe that the state’s tendency toward tyranny and abuse of
power must be feared and constrained. For Chinese, government is a
necessary good, the fundamental pillar ensuring order and preventing
chaos. In American-style free-market capitalism, government establishes
and enforces the rules; state ownership and government intervention in
the economy sometimes occur but are undesirable exceptions. In China’s
state-led market economy, the government establishes targets for growth,
picks and subsidizes industries to develop, promotes national
champions, and undertakes significant, long-term economic projects to
advance the interests of the nation.
Chinese
culture does not celebrate American-style individualism, which measures
society by how well it protects the rights and fosters the freedom of
individuals. Indeed, the Chinese term for “individualism”—gerenzhuyi—suggests
a selfish preoccupation with oneself over one’s community. China’s
equivalent of “give me liberty or give me death” would be “give me a
harmonious community or give me death.” For China, order is the highest
value, and harmony results from a hierarchy in which participants obey
Confucius’ first imperative: Know thy place.
This
view applies not only to domestic society but also to global affairs,
where the Chinese view holds that China’s rightful place is atop the
pyramid; other states should be arranged as subordinate tributaries. The
American view is somewhat different. Since at least the end of World
War II, Washington has sought to prevent the emergence of a “peer
competitor” that could challenge U.S. military dominance. But postwar
American conceptions of international order have also emphasized the
need for a rule-based global system that restrains even the United
States.
Finally,
the Americans and the Chinese think about time and experience its
passage differently. Americans tend to focus on the present and often
count in hours or days. Chinese, on the other hand, are more
historical-minded and often think in terms of decades and even
centuries.
Of course, these are
sweeping generalizations that are by necessity reductive and not fully
reflective of the complexities of American and Chinese society. But they
also provide important reminders that policymakers in the United States
and China should keep in mind in seeking to manage this competition
without war.
WE'RE NUMBER ONE
The cultural differences between the United States and China are aggravated by a remarkable trait shared by both countries: an extreme superiority complex. Each sees itself as exceptional—indeed,
without peer. But there can be only one number one. Lee Kuan Yew, the
former prime minister of Singapore, had doubts about the United States’
ability to adapt to a rising China. “For America to be displaced, not in
the world, but only in the western Pacific, by an Asian people long
despised and dismissed with contempt as decadent, feeble, corrupt, and
inept is emotionally very difficult to accept,” he said in a 1999
interview. “The sense of cultural supremacy of the Americans will make
this adjustment most difficult.”
In
some ways, Chinese exceptionalism is more sweeping than its American
counterpart. “The [Chinese] empire saw itself as the center of the
civilized universe,” the historian Harry Gelber wrote in his 2001 book, Nations Out of Empires.
During the imperial era, “the Chinese scholar-bureaucrat did not think
of a ‘China’ or a ‘Chinese civilization’ in the modern sense at all. For
him, there were the Han people and, beyond that, only barbarism.
Whatever was not civilized was, by definition, barbaric.”
To
this day, the Chinese take great pride in their civilizational
achievements. “Our nation is a great nation,” Chinese President Xi
Jinping declared in a 2012 speech. “During the civilization and
development process of more than 5,000 years, the Chinese nation has
made an indelible contribution to the civilization and advancement of
mankind.” Indeed, Xi claimed in his 2014 book, The Governance of China, that “China’s continuous civilization is not equal to anything on earth, but a unique achievement in world history.”
In the case of the United States and China,
Thucydidean risks are compounded by civilizational incompatibility
between the two countries, which exacerbates their competition and makes
it more difficult to achieve rapprochement. This mismatch is most
easily observed in the profound differences between American and Chinese
conceptions of the state, economics, the role of individuals, relations
among nations, and the nature of time.
Americans, too, see themselves as the
vanguard of civilization, especially when it comes to political
development. A passion for freedom is enshrined in the core document of
the American political creed, the Declaration of Independence, which
proclaims that “all men are created equal” and that they are “endowed by
their Creator with certain unalienable Rights.” The declaration
specifies that these rights include “Life, Liberty and the pursuit of
Happiness” and asserts that these are not matters for debate but rather
“self-evident” truths. As the American historian Richard Hofstadter
wrote, “It has been our fate as a nation not to have ideologies, but to
be one.” In contrast, order is the central political value for
Chinese—and order results from hierarchy. Individual liberty, as
Americans understand it, disrupts hierarchy; in the Chinese view, it
invites chaos.
DO AS I SAY . . . AND AS I DO?
These
philosophical differences find expression in each country’s concept of
government. Although animated by a deep distrust of authority, the
founders of the United States
recognized that society required government. Otherwise, who would
protect citizens from foreign threats or violations of their rights by
criminals at home? They wrestled, however, with a dilemma: a government
powerful enough to perform its essential functions would tend toward
tyranny. To manage this challenge, they designed a government of
“separated institutions sharing power,” as the historian Richard
Neustadt described it. This deliberately produced constant struggle
among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches, which led to
delay, gridlock, and even dysfunction. But it also provided checks and
balances against abuse.
The
Chinese conception of government and its role in society could hardly
be more different. As Lee observed, “The country’s history and cultural
records show that when there is a strong center (Beijing or Nanjing),
the country is peaceful and prosperous. When the center is weak, then
the provinces and their counties are run by little warlords.”
Accordingly, the sort of strong central government that Americans resist
represents to the Chinese the principal agent advancing order and the
public good at home and abroad.
In some ways, Chinese exceptionalism is more sweeping than its American counterpart.
For
Americans, democracy is the only just form of government: authorities
derive their legitimacy from the consent of the governed. That is not
the prevailing view in China, where it is common to believe that the
government earns or losses political legitimacy based on its
performance. In a provocative TED Talk delivered in 2013, the Shanghai-based venture capitalist Eric Li challenged democracy’s presumed superiority.
“I was asked once, ‘The party wasn’t voted in by election. Where is the
source of legitimacy?’” he recounted. “I said, ‘How about competency?’” He went on to remind
his audience that in 1949, when the Chinese Community Party took power,
“China was mired in civil war, dismembered by foreign aggression, [and]
average life expectancy at that time [was] 41 years. Today [China] is
the second-largest economy in the world, an industrial powerhouse, and
its people live in increasing prosperity.”
Washington and Beijing also have distinctly different approaches when
it comes to promoting their fundamental political values
internationally. Americans believe that human rights and democracy are
universal aspirations, requiring only the example of the United States
(and sometimes a neoimperialist nudge) to be realized everywhere. The
United States is, as Huntington wrote in his follow-on book, The Clash of Civilizations,
“a missionary nation,” driven by the belief “that the non-Western
peoples should commit themselves to the Western values . . . and should
embody these values in their institutions.” Most Americans believe that
democratic rights will benefit anyone, anywhere in the world.
Over
the decades, Washington has pursued a foreign policy that seeks to
advance the cause of democracy—even, on occasion, attempting to impose
it on those who have failed to embrace it themselves. In contrast,
although the Chinese believe that others can look up to them, admire
their virtues, and even attempt to mimic their behavior, China’s leaders
have not proselytized on behalf of their approach. As the American
diplomat Henry Kissinger
has noted, imperial China “did not export its ideas but let others come
to seek them.” And unsurprisingly, Chinese leaders have been deeply
suspicious of U.S. efforts to convert them to the American creed. In the
late 1980s, Deng Xiaoping, who led China from 1978 until 1989 and began
the country’s process of economic liberalization, complained to a
visiting dignitary that Western talk of “human rights, freedom, and
democracy is designed only to safeguard the interests of the strong,
rich countries, which take advantage of their strength to bully weak
countries, and which pursue hegemony and practice power politics.”
THINKING FAST AND SLOW
The
American and Chinese senses of the past, present, and future are
fundamentally distinct. Americans proudly celebrated their country
turning 241 in July; the Chinese are fond of noting that their history
spans five millennia. U.S. leaders often refer to “the American
experiment,” and their sometimes haphazard policies reflect that
attitude. China, by contrast, sees itself as a fixture of the universe:
it always was; it always will be.
Because
of their expansive sense of time, Chinese leaders are careful to
distinguish the acute from the chronic and the urgent from the merely
important. It is difficult to imagine a U.S. political leader suggesting
that a major foreign policy problem should be put on the proverbial
shelf for a generation. That, however, is precisely what Deng did in
1979, when he led the Chinese side in negotiations with Japan over the
disputed Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands and accepted an eventual, rather than an
immediate, solution to the dispute.
Ever more sensitive to the demands of the
news cycle and popular opinion, U.S. politicians take to Twitter or
announce alliterative, bullet-point policy plans that promise quick
solutions. In contrast, Chinese leaders are strategically patient: as
long as trends are moving in their favor, they are comfortable waiting
out a problem. Americans think of themselves as problem solvers.
Reflecting their short-termism, they see problems as discrete issues to
be addressed now so that they can move on to the next ones. The American
novelist and historian Gore Vidal
once called his country “the United States of Amnesia”—a place where
every idea is an innovation and every crisis is unprecedented. This
contrasts sharply with the deep historical and institutional memory of
the Chinese, who assume that there is nothing new under the sun.
Indeed, Chinese leaders tend to believe that many problems cannot be
solved and must instead be managed. They see challenges as long term
and iterative; issues they face today resulted from processes that have evolved over the past year, decade, or century. Policy actions they
take today will simply contribute to that evolution. For instance,
since 1949, Taiwan has been ruled by what Beijing considers rogue
Chinese nationalists. Although Chinese leaders insist that Taiwan
remains an integral part of China, they have pursued a long-term
strategy involving tightening economic and social entanglements to
slowly suck the island back into the fold.
WHO'S THE BOSS?
The
civilizational clash that will make it hardest for Washington and
Beijing to escape Thucydides’ trap emerges from their competing conceptions of world order.
China’s treatment of its own citizens provides the script for its
relations with weaker neighbors abroad. The Chinese Communist Party
maintains order by enforcing an authoritarian hierarchy that demands the
deference and compliance of citizens. China’s international behavior
reflects similar expectations of order: in an unscripted moment during a
2010 meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, then
Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi responded to complaints about
Chinese assertiveness in the South China Sea by telling his regional
counterparts and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that “China is a
big country and other countries are small countries, and that’s just a
fact.”
By
contrast, American leaders aspire to an international rule of law that
is essentially U.S. domestic rule of law writ large. At the same time,
they also recognize the realities of power in the Hobbesian global
jungle, where it is better to be the lion than the lamb. Washington
often tries to reconcile this tension by depicting a world in which the
United States is a benevolent hegemon, acting as the world’s lawmaker,
policeman, judge, and jury.
Washington urges
other powers to accept the rule-based international order over which it
presides. But through Chinese eyes, it looks like the Americans make the
rules and others obey Washington’s commands. General Martin Dempsey,
former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, became familiar with the
predictable resentment this elicited from China. “One of the things that
fascinated me about the Chinese is whenever I would have a conversation
with them about international standards or international rules of
behavior, they would inevitably point out that those rules were made
when they were absent from the world stage,” Dempsey remarked in an
interview with this magazine last year.
YOU CAN GO YOUR OWN WAY
The
United States has spent nearly three decades as the world’s most
powerful country. During that time, Washington’s massive influence on
world affairs has made it crucial for elites and leaders in other
nations to understand American culture and the U.S. approach to
strategy. Americans, on the other hand, have often felt that they have the luxury of not needing to think too hard about the worldviews of people
elsewhere—a lack of interest encouraged by the belief, held by many
American elites, that the rest of the world has been slowly but surely
becoming more like the United States anyway.
In recent years, however, the rise of China
has challenged that indifference. Policymakers in the United States are
beginning to recognize that they must improve their understanding of
China—especially Chinese strategic thinking. In particular, U.S.
policymakers have begun to see distinctive traits in the way their
Chinese counterparts think about the use of military force. In deciding
whether, when, and how to attack adversaries, Chinese leaders have for
the most part been rational and pragmatic. Beyond that, however,
American policymakers and analysts have identified five presumptions and
predilections that offer further clues to China’s likely strategic
behavior in confrontations.
First,
in both war and peace, Chinese strategy is unabashedly driven by
realpolitik and unencumbered by any serious need to justify Chinese
behavior in terms of international law or ethical norms. This allows the
Chinese government to be ruthlessly flexible, since it feels few
constraints from prior rationales and is largely immune to criticisms of
inconsistency. So, for example, when Kissinger arrived in China in 1971
to begin secret talks about a U.S.-Chinese rapprochement, he found his
interlocutors unblinkered by ideology and brutally candid about China’s
national interests. Whereas Kissinger and U.S. President Richard Nixon
felt it necessary to justify the compromise they ultimately reached to
end the Vietnam War as “peace with honor,” the Chinese leader Mao Zedong
felt no need to pretend that in establishing relations with the
capitalist United States to strengthen communist China’s position
vis-à-vis the Soviet Union, he was somehow bolstering a larger socialist
international movement.
Just
as China’s practical approach to international politics arguably gives
China an edge over the United States, so, too, does China’s obsessively
holistic strategic worldview. Chinese planners see everything as
connected to everything else. The evolving context in which a strategic
situation occurs determines what the Chinese call shi. This
term has no direct English translation but can be rendered as the
“potential energy” or “momentum” inherent in any circumstance at a given
moment. It comprises geography and terrain, weather, the balance of
forces, surprise, morale, and many other elements. “Each factor
influences the others,” as Kissinger wrote in his 2011 book, On China, “giving rise to subtle
shifts in momentum and relative advantage.” Thus, a skilled Chinese
strategist spends most of his time patiently “observing and cultivating
changes in the strategic landscape” and moves only when everything is in
optimal alignment. Then he strikes swiftly. To an observer, the result
appears inevitable.
War
for Chinese strategists is primarily psychological and political. In
Chinese thinking, an opponent’s perception of facts on the ground may be
just as important as the facts themselves. For imperial China, creating
and sustaining the image of a civilization so superior that it
represented “the center of the universe” served to deter enemies from
challenging Chinese dominance. Today, a narrative of China’s inevitable
rise and the United States’ irreversible decline plays a similar role.
Traditionally,
the Chinese have sought victory not in a decisive battle but through
incremental moves designed to gradually improve their position. David
Lai, an expert on Asian military affairs, has illustrated this approach
by comparing the Western game of chess with its Chinese equivalent, weiqi (often referred to as go). In chess, players seek to dominate the center of the board and conquer the opponent. In weiqi, players seek to surround the opponent. If the chess master sees five or six moves ahead, the weiqi
master sees 20 or 30. Attending to every dimension in the broader
relationship with an adversary, the Chinese strategist resists rushing
prematurely toward victory, instead aiming to build incremental
advantage. “In the Western tradition, there is a heavy emphasis on the
use of force; the art of war is largely limited to the battlefields; and
the way to fight is force on force,” Lai wrote in a 2004 analysis for
the U.S. Army War College’s Strategic Studies Institute. By contrast,
“the philosophy behind go . . . is to compete for relative gain
rather than seeking complete annihilation of the opponent forces.” In a
wise reminder, Lai warns that “it is dangerous to play go with the chess mindset.”
LET'S MAKE A DEAL
Washington would do well to heed that
warning. In the coming years, any number of flash points could produce a
crisis in U.S.-Chinese relations, including further territorial
disputes over the South China Sea
and tensions over North Korea’s burgeoning nuclear weapons program.
Since it will take at least another decade or more for China’s military
capabilities to fully match those of the United States, the Chinese will
be cautious and prudent about any lethal use of force against the
Americans. Beijing will treat military force as a subordinate instrument
in its foreign policy, which seeks not victory in battle but the
achievement of national objectives. It will bolster its diplomatic and
economic connections with its neighbors, deepening their dependency on
China, and use economic leverage to encourage (or coerce) cooperation on
other issues. Although China has traditionally viewed war as a last
resort, should it conclude that long-term trend lines are no longer
moving in its favor and that it is losing bargaining power, it could
initiate a limited military conflict to attempt to reverse the trends.
The
last time the United States faced extremely high Thucydidean risks was
during the Cold War—especially during the Cuban missile crisis.
Reflecting on the crisis a few months after its resolution, U.S.
President John F. Kennedy identified one enduring lesson: “Above all,
while defending our own vital interests, nuclear powers must avert those
confrontations which bring an adversary to a choice of either a
humiliating retreat or nuclear war.” In spite of Moscow’s hard-line
rhetoric, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev ultimately concluded that he
could compromise on nuclear arms in Cuba. Likewise, Kissinger and Nixon
later discovered that the Chinese ideologue Mao was quite adept at
giving ground when it served China’s interests.
Xi
and U.S. President Donald Trump have both made maximalist claims,
especially when it comes to the South China Sea. But both are also
dealmakers. The better the Trump administration understands how Beijing
sees China’s role in the world and the country’s core interests, the
better prepared it will be to negotiate. The problem remains
psychological projection: even seasoned State Department officials too
often mistakenly assume that China’s vital interests mirror those of the
United States. The officials now crafting the Trump administration’s
approach to China would be wise to read the ancient Chinese philosopher
Sun-tzu: “If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the
result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy,
for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know
neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.”
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