http://www.moscowtimes.ru/opinion/article/384646.html

>From Adversaries to Allies 
02 October 2009
By Yevgeny Bazhanov




When I was assigned to work at the Soviet Embassy in Beijing in 1982, many of 
my fellow diplomats asked, "What did you do wrong to get such a terrible, 
backwoods assignment?"

China had a bad reputation at the time. Few Soviets remembered China's rich 
history, nor did they understand why the Chinese considered their country to be 
the center of civilization. But the Soviet people knew well that in 1949, the 
Communist Party took control of impoverished, semicolonial China and generously 
helped its Chairman Mao Zedong to build socialism.

The Chinese turned out to be "revisionists." Mao undertook the Great Leap 
Forward, forcing peasants to smelt pig iron in their own gardens. When the 
campaign led to mass famine, Mao unleashed the Cultural Revolution and set the 
ruthless Red Guard loose to silence the country's critics. At the same time, 
the Chinese-Soviet split was in full force during Soviet leader Nikita 
Krushchev's rule. As a result, the Red Guard threatened to "skin and crush the 
heads" of the Soviets and other "anti-Chinese clowns." Beijing officially 
called on its citizens to "prepare for war and dig trenches."

By 1982, the memory of all those horrors and passions had been forgotten. 
Reformers, headed by Deng Xiaoping, came to power, and they referred to the 
Cultural Revolution as "a thoroughly rotten dictatorship and the most lurid 
fascism with feudalist impurities." Deng set out to modernize the country. The 
new leadership criticized the notion of "permanent revolution" and began 
building the foundation for China's new market-based economy.

Today, less than 30 years later, the gross domestic product of the People's 
Republic of China will soon be equal to that of the United States, and 
Chinese-manufactured goods - from computers to shoes - fill the markets of 
literally every country on earth.

The United States is particularly nervous about China's increasing economic and 
political strength in the global arena. China is encroaching on the U.S. zone 
of influence, primarily in the Asia-Pacific region. As a result, Washington 
accuses Beijing of every global misdeed - from preparing to attack Taiwan and 
forcefully seize South China Sea oil fields to establishing "imperialistic 
control" over developing countries and exporting illegal drugs. To be sure, the 
United States is not the only one watching China's rise with anxiety. China's 
neighbors are also getting fidgety at the awakening of the "giant dragon" that 
exerts deadly pressure on them with its economic tentacles and showers them 
with acid rain.

This is a typical reaction whenever there is a  major shift in the global 
balance of power. Other countries view the new superpower as a threat and start 
to panic. The question is: Should Russia also panic? Exaggerating the "Chinese 
peril" will only irritate the Chinese and spoil Russian-Chinese relations.

Russia should instead focus on that which strengthens relations between Russia 
and China. To begin with, Beijing, like Moscow, is a big supporter of 
multipolarity in international relations and needs Russia's support to 
strengthen it. Second, China has other external problems such as tensions with 
Japan, India and countries in Southeast Asia and disputes connected with 
Taiwan. Third, China is facing serious internal problems as well. Given such 
difficult circumstances, it is clearly in Beijing's interests to maintain peace 
with Russia, with whom it shares a 4,000-kilometer border. During the 
Chinese-Soviet split, Russia and China were enemies. Now, despite ideological 
differences, we understand each other better and work to solve similar 
problems. Finally, the economies of the two countries are complementary. For 
many years to come, China will need an increasing quantity of energy resources 
from Siberia and the Far East, as well as Russian technology - especially 
military technology. For its part, Russia is interested in buying 
Chinese-manufactured goods and receiving Chinese investment and manpower. 
Russia will not be able to modernize its eastern regions under its own power.  

France and Germany offer an interesting example of how former enemies can 
create a prosperous relationship. The two countries were at war for almost a 
century, and now the border between them are virtually seamless and their 
bilateral trade volumes are huge. 

It will not be easy to achieve the same relationship between Russia and China, 
but the two countries have no other choice. On Thursday, China celebrated the 
60th anniversary of the creation of the People's Republic of China, and this 
offers an excellent opportunity for Moscow and Beijing to make a firm 
commitment to strengthen economic and political relations for the next 60 years 
to come.

Yevgeny Bazhanov is the vice chancellor of research and international relations 
at the Foreign Ministry's Diplomatic Academy in Moscow.




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