中国法律博客
ChinaLegalBlog.com
John Ikenberry’s FA Article
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I've seen a few comments on Ikenberry's article on China's rise in the current issue of Foreign Affairs. I have not read through everything in that issue of FA yet, but I did finally take a look at Ikenberry's argument that China's rise need not be at the expense of the U.S.

I agree with the thesis that peaceful transition to a true multi-polar world can occur through integration via international institutions. I've believed this for a long time, although after my two years at Johns Hopkins SAIS, and after the lessons of the Iraq War, I'm slightly more of a realist than I used to be. Thanks, Wolfowitz.

Ikenberry's article should be read in full, but let me throw out a couple of paragraphs to present his argument. His point that the modern Chinese state is maturing within the international system seems like a no-brainer to me given Chinese foreign policy over the past ten years.

The Western order's strong framework of rules and institutions is already starting to facilitate Chinese integration. At first, China embraced certain rules and institutions for defensive purposes: protecting its sovereignty and economic interests while seeking to reassure other states of its peaceful intentions by getting involved in regional and global groupings. But as the scholar Marc Lanteigne argues, "What separates China from other states, and indeed previous global powers, is that not only is it 'growing up' within a milieu of international institutions far more developed than ever before, but more importantly, it is doing so while making active use of these institutions to promote the country's development of global power status." China, in short, is increasingly working within, rather than outside of, the Western order.

China not only needs continued access to the global capitalist system; it also wants the protections that the system's rules and institutions provide. The WTO's multilateral trade principles and dispute-settlement mechanisms, for example, offer China tools to defend against the threats of discrimination and protectionism that rising economic powers often confront.

Seen in this light, the rise of China need not lead to a volcanic struggle with the United States over global rules and leadership. The Western order has the potential to turn the coming power shift into a peaceful change on terms favorable to the United States. But that will only happen if the United States sets about strengthening the existing order. Today, with Washington preoccupied with terrorism and war in the Middle East, rebuilding Western rules and institutions might to some seem to be of only marginal relevance. Many Bush administration officials have been outright hostile to the multilateral, rule-based system that the United States has shaped and led. Such hostility is foolish and dangerous. China will become powerful: it is already on the rise, and the United States' most powerful strategic weapon is the ability to decide what sort of international order will be in place to receive it.