← Browse

Does the United States need a China rethink?

Summary

Seven experts examine the question of whether the United States and China have irreconcilable visions of world order.

Full Text

In this roundtable review of “ The United States, China, and the Competition for Control ” by Melanie Sisson, seven experts examine the question of whether the United States and China have irreconcilable visions of world order.

Back to top

Ling Chen

On China and the world, America has a choice

In her new book, “The United States, China, and the Competition for Control,” Melanie Sisson takes a bold but nuanced stance, calling for a reconsideration of the conventional wisdom among U.S.-based China analysts.

They usually make the assumption that China is on its way to overthrowing the postwar order and replacing the United States as the sole global leader, and that China seeks to do so through the expansion of military power.

Sisson calls on American policymakers to reexamine these views and assumptions.

Sisson contends that China’s historical engagement with the post-World War II international order is best described as “deviance within acceptable levels.” According to her, the People’s Republic of China’s behavior has neither been as disruptive as often portrayed in Western narratives, nor as exemplary as it claims in its own official discourse.

Given that China has both benefited from and partially invested in the postwar order, Sisson argues that it is in the United States’ best interest to bind China into existing international institutions and engage in bargaining over the rules of the game.

Sisson also cautions American policymakers against uncritically cherry-picking statements and speeches by Chinese leaders that, when taken out of context, appear to confirm existing assumptions.

One consideration that can be added to her argument is whether such rhetoric is primarily intended for a domestic audience or for foreign observers.

Many of the so-called “wolf warrior” remarks made by Chinese officials may be better understood as efforts to stoke domestic nationalism and build regime support, rather than as concrete expressions of foreign policy intent.

Facing the challenge of globalization and China, Sisson provided us with two possibilities: either the United States chooses to move away from the world it created, or it can recommit to the postwar order and readjust the distribution of benefits and responsibilities.

However, the United States seems to have already made its choice.

Consumed by the narrative that postwar, free-trade multilateralism mistreated it, the United States is gradually giving up on the world it created and increasingly retreating from the postwar order.

We have recently seen attempts by the United States to not only isolate itself but actively undermine the very order that promoted peace and prosperity around the globe for decades since World War II.

The United States is on a trajectory of unwillingness to cooperate within the order and has turned to indiscriminate protectionism and bilateralism, causing tremendous instability between the United States and its long-term allies.

This may not change the nature of global competition between the United States and China in the coming decades, but at a minimum, it has substantial implications for the potential supporting role that U.S. allies and partners can play.

Sisson points out that “the United States has ample means—including the post-war infrastructure, robust relationships with allies and partners, and America’s own considerable strengths—through which it has and can continue to influence China’s behavior,” and further argues that the United States should aim not to convert China’s own interests but to disincentive China from using force to pursue them.

However, in light of recent shifts in U.S. foreign policy, if Washington has indeed begun to abandon the first two pillars of its influence—multilateral institutions and allied partnerships—what remains is the third: the United States’ own unilateral economic and military power, which tends to be coercive in nature.

The trajectory and outcomes of the U.S.-China competition will therefore be shaped in no small part by how the United States chooses to project itself on the global stage.

Back to top

Ryan Hass

Going against the herd

In her new book, “The United States, China, and the Competition for Control,” Melanie Sisson unflinchingly positions herself in front of a stampede and shouts for the herd to stop and think about where it is heading.

The herd—the U.S.-based China-watching community—has broadly coalesced around two suppositions relating to China: first, that China is bent on upending the post-World War II international order; and second, that China is determined to displace the United States to become the world’s unchallenged leader.

Sisson urges American leaders to examine both these suppositions with greater dispassion and self-awareness.

She observes that China has disproportionately benefited from the stability and the free flow of goods, capital, and ideas that the international order has provided.

She concludes that the “PRC’s record of compliance with the principles and institutions of the post-war order is neither as bad as U.S. discourse would suggest nor as good as Beijing’s presentations would contend.” Instead of casting China as being in league with Russia and other discontents who are determined to tear down the existing order, Sisson instead urges American leaders to “capitalize on China’s attachment to the current order” by drawing Beijing into negotiations over how best to adapt the system to modern-day realities.

Sisson also warns the American policy community against casually accepting curated excerpts of statements by Chinese leaders, scholars, and state media as smoking gun evidence of Chinese ambitions to displace the United States on the world stage.

She argues that Chinese leaders’ quotes are often clipped out of context and stylized to support American scholars’ prior convictions.

While much of the China-watching world has accepted an expansive interpretation of China’s ambitions, there is not a universal consensus around the scope of China’s aims.

Sisson is right to observe that this topic remains contested.

Instead of accepting as given that China is bent on a zero-sum struggle with the United States for global primacy, Sisson instead concludes that China’s aims are more modest.

She asserts that China is determined to resurrect its status as a leading power on the world stage and reconstitute its claimed territories, including those that overlap with American allies and partners such as India, the Philippines, Japan, and Taiwan.

Her verdict is that “some of these [PRC] behaviors challenge U.S. interests and some of them are offensive to liberal principles, but this does not make them an assault on the post-war order.”

In the process of prosecuting her case, Sisson may overstate the degree to which China is willing to accept constraints on its ambitions in service of respecting the rules, norms, and institutions that comprise the postwar international order.

Sisson argues, for example, that China has largely adhered to and invested in the postwar international economic order, which is true up to a point.

Yes, China has accepted rulings from the World Trade Organization and contributed to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

At the same time, China has shown an unwillingness to adopt economic disciplines that would keep the international trading system viable, instead bulldozing forward with a state-led economic system that has generated distortions so large as to call into question whether the system itself can remain viable.

Similarly, on China’s maritime disputes in the South China Sea, China has shown an unwillingness to be bound by international rules, instead resorting to intensifying coercion and threats of military force against other claimants who stand in the way of China’s assertion of control over contested territories.

Sisson closes her book with a call for America to do better.

If the United States wishes to lead, then it needs to attract followers.

America’s fixation on countering China is crowding out its focus on building support for its vision of the future of Asia and the international order.

America undermines its own attraction when it attacks its allies, repels foreign students, and destroys key foreign policy instruments such as the U.S.

Agency for International Development and Voice of America.

Other countries need to be convinced that what is good for America is good for them, too.

If they are not, Sisson warns, then other countries will hedge by moving closer to China.

Back to top

Jennifer Kavanagh

U.S.-China progress is possible

As President Donald Trump’s tariffs upset the world economy, Beijing has been on the offensive, casting China as the defender of the global economic order and a stabilizing counterweight to an increasingly unreliable United States.

This is, of course, an inversion of the popular Washington narrative that asserts just the opposite, that China is the upstart disruptor and the United States the status quo power.

Melanie Sisson’s “The United States, China, and the Competition for Control” argues convincingly, however, that the reality is much more complicated than either of these simple accounts suggests.

Challenging conventional wisdom, Sisson shows that the record of U.S. and Chinese compliance with the postwar order is not one in which the United States mostly adhered to prevailing norms and rules while China mostly violated them.

Instead, although Washington played a central role in setting up many of the most powerful postwar institutions, the United States has frequently pushed back against the existing system when its leaders deemed it necessary.

For its part, Beijing has certainly chafed under the constraints of the U.S.-led global order and refused to follow standards it found disadvantageous.

But, as Sisson notes, “far from opting out or seeking to obstruct or overturn the post-war order’s institutions, China integr

...

Document ID: does-the-united-states-need-a-china-rethink