Clash of the Titans

By Zbigniew Brzezinski, John J. Mearsheimer
 

January/February 2005
 
Is China more interested in money than missiles? Will the United States seek
to contain China as it once contained the Soviet Union? Zbigniew Brzezinski
and John Mearsheimer go head-to-head on whether these two great powers are
destined to fight it out.


Make Money, Not War - By Zbigniew Brzezinski

Today in East Asia, China is rising-peacefully so far. For understandable
reasons, China harbors resentment and even humiliation about some chapters
of its history. Nationalism is an important force, and there are serious
grievances regarding external issues, notably Taiwan. But conflict is not
inevitable or even likely. China's leadership is not inclined to challenge
the United States militarily, and its focus remains on economic development
and winning acceptance as a great power. 

China is preoccupied, and almost fascinated, with the trajectory of its own
ascent. When I met with the top leadership not long ago, what struck me was
the frequency with which I was asked for predictions about the next 15 or 20
years. Not long ago, the Chinese Politburo invited two distinguished,
Western-trained professors to a special meeting. Their task was to analyze
nine major powers since the 15th century to see why they rose and fell. It's
an interesting exercise for the top leadership of a massive and complex
country. 

This focus on the experience of past great powers could lead to the
conclusion that the iron laws of political theory and history point to some
inevitable collision or conflict. But there are other political realities.
In the next five years, China will host several events that will restrain
the conduct of its foreign policy. The 2008 Olympic Games is the most
important, of course. The scale of the economic and psychological investment
in the Beijing games is staggering. My expectation is that they will be
magnificently organized. And make no mistake, China intends to win at the
Olympics. A second date is 2010, when China will hold the World Expo in
Shanghai. Successfully organizing these international gatherings is
important to China and suggests that a cautious foreign policy will prevail.

More broadly, China is determined to sustain its economic growth. A
confrontational foreign policy could disrupt that growth, harm hundreds of
millions of Chinese, and threaten the Communist Party's hold on power.
China's leadership appears rational, calculating, and conscious not only of
China's rise but also of its continued weakness.

There will be inevitable frictions as China's regional role increases and as
a Chinese "sphere of influence" develops. U.S. power may recede gradually in
the coming years, and the unavoidable decline in Japan's influence will
heighten the sense of China's regional preeminence. But to have a real
collision, China needs a military that is capable of going toe-to-toe with
the United States. At the strategic level, China maintains a posture of
minimum deterrence. Forty years after acquiring nuclear-weapons technology,
China has just 24 ballistic missiles capable of hitting the United States.
Even beyond the realm of strategic warfare, a country must have the capacity
to attain its political objectives before it will engage in limited war. It
is hard to envisage how China could promote its objectives when it is
acutely vulnerable to a blockade and isolation enforced by the United
States. In a conflict, Chinese maritime trade would stop entirely. The flow
of oil would cease, and the Chinese economy would be paralyzed. 

I have the sense that the Chinese are cautious about Taiwan, their fierce
talk notwithstanding. Last March, a Communist Party magazine noted that "we
have basically contained the overt threat of Taiwanese independence since
[President] Chen [Shuibian] took office, avoiding a worst-case scenario and
maintaining the status of Taiwan as part of China." A public opinion poll
taken in Beijing at the same time found that 58 percent thought military
action was unnecessary. Only 15 percent supported military action to
"liberate" Taiwan.

Of course, stability today does not ensure peace tomorrow. If China were to
succumb to internal violence, for example, all bets are off.

If sociopolitical tensions or social inequality becomes unmanageable, the
leadership might be tempted to exploit nationalist passions. But the small
possibility of this type of catastrophe does not weaken my belief that we
can avoid the negative consequences that often accompany the rise of new
powers. China is clearly assimilating into the international system. Its
leadership appears to realize that attempting to dislodge the United States
would be futile, and that the cautious spread of Chinese influence is the
surest path to global preeminence.


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Better to Be Godzilla than Bambi - By John J. Mearsheimer

China cannot rise peacefully, and if it continues its dramatic economic
growth over the next few decades, the United States and China are likely to
engage in an intense security competition with considerable potential for
war. Most of China's neighbors, including India, Japan, Singapore, South
Korea, Russia, and Vietnam, will likely join with the United States to
contain China's power.

To predict the future in Asia, one needs a theory that explains how rising
powers are likely to act and how other states will react to them. My theory
of international politics says that the mightiest states attempt to
establish hegemony in their own region while making sure that no rival great
power dominates another region. The ultimate goal of every great power is to
maximize its share of world power and eventually dominate the system.

The international system has several defining characteristics. The main
actors are states that operate in anarchy-which simply means that there is
no higher authority above them. All great powers have some offensive
military capability, which means that they can hurt each other. Finally, no
state can know the future intentions of other states with certainty. The
best way to survive in such a system is to be as powerful as possible,
relative to potential rivals. The mightier a state is, the less likely it is
that another state will attack it. 

The great powers do not merely strive to be the strongest great power,
although that is a welcome outcome. Their ultimate aim is to be the
hegemon-the only great power in the system. But it is almost impossible for
any state to achieve global hegemony in the modern world, because it is too
hard to project and sustain power around the globe. Even the United States
is a regional but not a global hegemon. The best outcome that a state can
hope for is to dominate its own backyard. 

States that gain regional hegemony have a further aim: to prevent other
geographical areas from being dominated by other great powers. Regional
hegemons, in other words, do not want peer competitors. Instead, they want
to keep other regions divided among several great powers so that these
states will compete with each other. In 1991, shortly after the Cold War
ended, the first Bush administration boldly stated that the United States
was now the most powerful state in the world and planned to remain so. That
same message appeared in the famous National Security Strategy issued by the
second Bush administration in September 2002. This document's stance on
preemptive war generated harsh criticism, but hardly a word of protest
greeted the assertion that the United States should check rising powers and
maintain its commanding position in the global balance of power. 

China is likely to try to dominate Asia the way the United States dominates
the Western Hemisphere. Specifically, China will strive to maximize the
power gap between itself and its neighbors, especially Japan and Russia, and
to ensure that no state in Asia can threaten it.

It is unlikely that China will go on a rampage and conquer other Asian
countries. Instead, China will want to dictate the boundaries of acceptable
behavior to neighboring countries, much the way the United States does in
the Americas. An increasingly powerful China is also likely to try to push
the United States out of Asia, much the way the United States pushed the
European great powers out of the Western Hemisphere. Not incidentally,
gaining regional hegemony is probably the only way that China will get back
Taiwan. 

Why should we expect China to act differently than the United States? U.S.
policymakers, after all, react harshly when other great powers send military
forces into the Western Hemisphere. These foreign forces are invariably seen
as a potential threat to American security. Are the Chinese more principled,
more ethical, less nationalistic, or less concerned about their survival
than Westerners? They are none of these things, which is why China is likely
to imitate the United States and attempt to become a regional hegemon.
China's leadership and people remember what happened in the last century,
when Japan was powerful and China was weak. In the anarchic world of
international politics, it is better to be Godzilla than Bambi.

It is clear from the historical record how American policymakers will react
if China attempts to dominate Asia. The United States does not tolerate peer
competitors. As it demonstrated in the 20th century, it is determined to
remain the world's only regional hegemon. Therefore, the United States will
seek to contain China and ultimately weaken it to the point where it is no
longer capable of dominating Asia. In essence, the United States is likely
to behave toward China much the way it behaved toward the Soviet Union
during the Cold War. 

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Nukes Change Everything - Zbigniew Brzezinski responds.

As an occasional scholar, I am impressed by the power of theory. But
theory-at least in international relations-is essentially retrospective.
When something happens that does not fit the theory, it gets revised. And I
suspect that will happen in the U.S.-China relationship.

We live in a very different world than the one in which hegemonic powers
could go to war without erasing each other as societies. The nuclear age has
altered power politics in a way that was already evident in the U.S.-Soviet
competition. The avoidance of direct conflict in that standoff owed much to
weaponry that makes the total elimination of societies part of the
escalating dynamic of war. It tells you something that the Chinese are not
trying to acquire the military capabilities to take on the United States. 

How great powers behave is not predetermined. If the Germans and the
Japanese had not conducted themselves the way they did, their regimes might
not have been destroyed. Germany was not required to adopt the policy it did
in 1914 (indeed, German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck followed a very
different path). The Japanese in 1941 could have directed their expansionism
toward Russia rather than Britain and the United States. For its part, the
Chinese leadership appears much more flexible and sophisticated than many
previous aspirants to great power status. 


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Showing the United States the Door - John J. Mearsheimer responds.

The dichotomy that you raised between theory and political reality is an
important one. The reason that we have to privilege theory over political
reality is that we cannot know what political reality is going to look like
in the year 2025. You mentioned that you traveled to China recently and
talked to Chinese leaders who appear to be much more prudent about Taiwan
than the conventional wisdom has it. That may be true, but it's largely
irrelevant. The key issue is, What are the Chinese leaders and people going
to think about Taiwan in 2025? We have no way of knowing. So today's
political realities get washed out of the equation, and what really matters
is the theory that one employs to predict the future.

You also argue that China's desire for continued economic growth makes
conflict with the United States unlikely. One of the principal reasons that
China has been so successful economically over the past 20 years is that it
has not picked a fight with the United States. But that logic should have
applied to Germany before World War I and to Germany and Japan before World
War II. By 1939, the German economy was growing strongly, yet Hitler started
World War II. Japan started conflict in Asia despite its impressive economic
growth. Clearly there are factors that sometimes override economic
considerations and cause great powers to start wars-even when it hurts them
economically. 

It is also true that China does not have the military wherewithal to take on
the United States. That's absolutely correct-for now. But again, what we are
talking about is the situation in 2025 or 2030, when China has the military
muscle to take on the United States. What happens then, when China has a
much larger gross national product and a much more formidable military than
it has today? The history of great powers offers a straightforward answer:
China will try to push the Americans out of Asia and dominate the region.
And if it succeeds, it will be in an ideal situation to deal with Taiwan.


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America's Staying Power - Zbigniew Brzezinski responds.

How can China push the United States out of East Asia? Or, more pointedly,
how can China push the United States out of Japan? And if the United States
were somehow pushed out of Japan or decided to leave on its own, what would
the Japanese do? Japan has an impressive military program and, in a matter
of months, it could have a significant nuclear deterrent. Frankly, I doubt
that China could push the United States out of Asia. But even if it could, I
don't think it would want to live with the consequences: a powerful,
nationalistic, and nuclear-armed Japan.

Of course, tensions over Taiwan are the most worrisome strategic danger. But
any Chinese military planner has to take into account the likelihood that
even if China could overrun Taiwan, the United States would enter the
conflict. That prospect vitiates any political calculus justifying a
military operation until and unless the United States is out of the picture.
And the United States will not be out of the picture for a long, long time.


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It's Not a Pretty Picture - John J. Mearsheimer responds.

If the Chinese are smart, they will not pick a fight over Taiwan now. This
is not the time. What they should do is concentrate on building their
economy to the point where it is bigger than the U.S. economy. Then they can
translate that economic strength into military might and create a situation
where they are in a position to dictate terms to states in the region and to
give the United States all sorts of trouble. 

>From China's point of view, it would be ideal to dominate Asia, and for
Brazil, Argentina, or Mexico to became a great power and force the United
States to concentrate on its own region. The great advantage the United
States has at the moment is that no state in the Western Hemisphere can
threaten its survival or security interests. So the United States is free to
roam the world causing trouble in other people's backyards. Other states,
including China of course, have a vested interest in causing trouble in the
United States' backyard to keep it focused there. The picture I have painted
is not a pretty one. I wish I could tell a more optimistic story about the
future, but international politics is a nasty and dangerous business. No
amount of good will can ameliorate the intense security competition that
will set in as an aspiring hegemon appears in Asia. 


Zbigniew Brzezinski is a counselor at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies.
John J. Mearsheimer is the R. Wendell Harrison distinguished service
professor of political science at the University of Chicago, where he
codirects the Program in International Security Policy. He is the author of
The Tragedy of Great Power Politics (New York: W.W. Norton, 2001).

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