(http://www.chinapost.com.tw/)  _www.ChinaPost.com.tw_ 
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____________________________________
     
As China's star rises, so too  does fear


Wednesday, September 14, 2011
By Frank Ching, Special  to The China Post


The latest issue of Foreign Affairs  magazine carries an article on the 
inevitability of China becoming the  next superpower, one of a mounting cascade 
of articles on America's  decline and China's rise.  
For many Chinese, it is high time for their country to regain its  rightful 
place in the world, after a century and a half of humiliation,  beginning 
with the Opium War of 1839-1842 and culminating with the  invasion and 
occupation of much of China by Japan 100 years later.  
As Martin Jacques explains in his bestselling “When China Rules the  World:”
 “China had already begun to acquire its modern shape in the  centuries 
leading up to the birth of Christ” and, a millennium ago, it was  “the 
greatest maritime nation in the world.”  
Chairman Mao Zedong used to enjoin: “Let the past serve the present,  let 
foreign things serve China.”  
Today, his successors are heeding his words. They selectively apply  
Marxism (a foreign import) to China's needs and have resurrected  Confucius, 
whose 
descendants' corpses were dug up and desecrated during  the Cultural 
Revolution.  
President Hu Jintao has appropriated the Confucian concept of a  harmonious 
society. But a harmonious society also has implications beyond  China's 
borders. In theory, when virtue prevails in the world, then there  will be a 
harmonious global society.  
This is the ancient Chinese concept of Tianxia, or “all under heaven.”  
The emperor, who was the son of heaven, was by right the lawful ruler of  all 
under heaven, which can be understood variously as all of China or  even as 
the whole world.  
Thus when, in 1793, King George III of England dispatched Lord  McCartney 
to see the Qianlong emperor about establishing embassies in each  other's 
countries to facilitate trade, the emperor saw this as a request  from a 
tributary state.  
Today, there is an attempt to revive this idea of Tianxia, with China  of 
course in the center.  
In May, Stanford University held a three-day workshop on the concept of  
Tianxia, which was defined as the Chinese vision of world order. The  
conference was sponsored in part by the Chinese government, through  Stanford's 
Confucius Institute.  
Stanford said the workshop was meant to examine China's new  responsibility 
in the interstate world system.  
This suggests that China sees an evolving world order with itself at  the 
center. Other countries would offer respect and deference to Beijing  while 
the Middle Kingdom would dispense largesse to countries that know  their 
place and know how to behave.  
Beijing is attempting to smooth its rise on the world stage by making  use 
of traditional Chinese philosophical concepts, such as harmony and  
benevolence, to allay fears of an increasingly powerful China.  
But in reality to what extent did Confucian theory affect the behavior  of 
the Chinese government through the ages?  
This was the subject of a book published earlier this year by Columbia  
University Press called “Harmony and War,” written by Professor Yuan-kang  
Wang.  
Professor Wang's conclusion was: “Confucian culture failed to constrain  
Chinese use of force. Instead, China was clearly a practitioner of  
realpolitik, behaving much like other great powers have throughout world  
history. 
Chinese decisions to use force were predicated on leaders'  assessment of the 
relative strength between China and its adversary.”  
Would China's neighbors be comfortable with a revival of the tributary  
system and treat China as their suzerain?  
Perhaps they won't have a choice but, at present, every indication is  that 
even the Confucian societies in Asia are resisting China's dominance.   
Certainly Lee Kuan Yew, without doubt the world's most distinguished  
ethnic Chinese statesman, rejects this scenario. He has called on the  United 
States to maintain its military presence in Asia to balance a  rising China.  
“The size of China makes it impossible for the rest of Asia, including  
Japan and India, to match it in weight and capacity,” he said. “So we need  
America to strike a balance.”  
Referring to territorial disputes between China and small Southeast  Asian 
countries, including Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei,  Lee 
referred to the dispatch by China of patrol boats to the area. “Later,  behind 
these small patrol craft will be a blue-water navy,” he said.  
This is the current response in Southeast Asia to China's growing  
strength. If the United States should be unable to maintain its presence  in 
Asia, 
the countries of the region may have little choice but to  accommodate 
themselves to China's wishes.  
Then, we may see in the 21st century the re-creation of a system of  
international relations that disappeared hundreds of years ago, and that  never 
actually worked the way that it was meant to do in  theory.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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