A new essay casts doubt on the China threat as promulgated by our nation's ruling elite.
Writing in the journal Palladium, Richard Hanania has produced the first must-read essay of 2021. A research fellow at Columbia University’s Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, Hanania is part of an emerging generation of young scholars who reject the increasingly dubious verities of the Cold War and post-Cold War eras. Their arrival comes not a moment too soon.
The title of Hanania’s
piece is “China’s Real Threat is to America’s Ruling Ideology.” In this
context, ideology refers not only to a belief system—liberal democratic
capitalism, in our case—but also to a theory of history. Hanania’s real subject
is delusion: Washington’s insistence despite abundant evidence to the contrary
that the American way of life defines the ultimate destiny of humankind.
Hanania’s essay deserves to
be read in its entirety. But a brief synopsis of his argument goes like this:
despite the alarmism of official Washington in depicting China as the “national
security issue of our time,” the PRC’s emergence as a great power “in no way
harms the prosperity or security of most Americans.”
Ordinary Americans have no
reason to fear the People’s Republic, Hanania writes. True, the Chinese people
enjoy only limited freedom. True also, the Chinese government persecutes and
even brutalizes domestic minorities. Yet what should matter to the United
States is that Beijing “is not on a mission to fundamentally remake the world.”
President Xi Jinping is not engaged in subverting the American Bill of Rights.
He has his hands full running China.
Xi’s not-unreasonable
strategic purpose is to promote Chinese prosperity while maintaining China’s
territorial integrity and insulating itself from threats abroad—a purpose not
unlike our own before policymakers in Washington succumbed to fantasies of a
world remade in America’s self-image through the assertion of American military
might.
In sum, China wants to be
very wealthy and very safe—wealthier than any other nation on the planet and so
safe as to be immune to outside coercion. And for members of the American
policy establishment, therein lies the rub. From Washington’s perspective, “the
real problem with Beijing is not that it wants to dominate the world” but that
its upward trajectory “might stop the U.S. from doing so in a unipolar manner.”
Post-Cold War expectations
of a unipolar international order cultivated by the U.S. policy elite have
assumed that the universal embrace of democratic liberalism is an inevitability.
This is what being “on the right side of history”—a hallucinatory incantation
that pervades contemporary American political speech—signifies.
To the extent that China
demonstrates the feasibility of creating a stable, prosperous, and flourishing
society while flouting liberal democratic precepts, then claims that history
has a single right side become untenable. “If universal democratization is not
the ultimate endpoint of history,” Hanania pointedly asks, “how can the
American role in the world be justified?”
The answer is that it
can’t.
The real danger for
American elites, then, “is not that the U.S. may become less able to accomplish
geopolitical objectives,” although failures on that score, especially since
9/11, are legion. Instead, the danger is that the American people—the ones
whose sons and daughters wage war pursuant to geopolitical flights of fancy
concocted in Washington—might themselves “begin to question the logic of U.S.
global hegemony.”
For elites, then, the
ultimate danger is that ordinary citizens might cease to defer. Should the
American people embrace an alternative conception of history’s purpose, one not
keyed to the pursuit of militarized global primacy, then the authority of
national security elites will crumble. With that, hitherto hidden possibilities
just might present themselves.
Hanania writes:
Perhaps not every state is destined to become a liberal democracy, and nations with very different political systems can coexist peacefully…. Maybe the U.S. will not always be at the frontier of military and economic power, and the country that overtakes it may have completely different attitudes about the nature of the relationship between government and its citizens.
Under such circumstances,
he speculates, Americans might opt to “give up on policing the world and
instead turn inward and focus on finding out where exactly our institutions
have gone wrong.” Of course, turning inward describes with precision the worst
“nightmare for many national security and bureaucratic elites.”
Yet out of that nightmare
comes the possibility of salvation. Ultimately, Hanania writes, “Americans
themselves might begin asking themselves difficult questions about how well
they have been served by their own system, including the sacrifices in blood
and treasure they are regularly asked to make abroad.”
But Americans don’t have to
look abroad for evidence that they are ill-served by their own system. The
pervasive government incompetence on display during the ongoing coronavirus
pandemic tells them all they need to know.
These days, American consumers buy plenty of products that carry “Made in China” labels. Yet the most pressing problems afflicting our nation—inequality, racism, disunity, the waning legitimacy of basic institutions—are homegrown. They bear a label that reads “Made in the USA.”
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