The level of animosity between the two societies even now is not as great as it was between the Soviets and Americans during the Cold War. Think the 1950s-era McCarthyism in the US and some of its analogues in the Soviet Union. Finally, there is a lot of uncertainty still whether or not China’s rise is inexorable; whether or not they’ve just done the easy part going from being a very poor country $150/capita in 1978 to roughly $9,000/capita now. That’s remarkable but there are lots of countries that made that transition, then got stuck. People call that the middle-income trap. Going from $10,000/capita to $30,000 that’s hard to do. The US is now $50-60,000/capita so there is a long way to go for them to be as wealthy as the US ultimately is.
Moreover. their demography will be a considerable challenge over the next several decades. Their population is going to shrink and the median age will rise dramatically.
SOLI ÖZEL
I will say HUAWEI.
STEPHEN WALT
Yes, it’s not that they have not developed some industries that are very good in what they do. The question is whether they can do that across the board, in every important economic sector. Xi Jinping said he would like to turn China into the leading country in a whole series of critical technologies. There is also a little bit of blue smoke and mirrors going on when people point to Chinese technology and say that this will give them somehow this magical ability to do all sorts of things. They say that if we rely on Huawei technology, it is really a Trojan horse and it will infect all our societies. Someday someone in China will be able to flip a switch and turn off the American economy because we are relying upon some Chinese software. I think this is pretty far-fetched. If that’s something they are able to do down the road, it will be because we were not paying attention, not because they had this magical strategy.
SOLI ÖZEL
If this does not scare you, then Belt and Road doesn’t either?
STEPHEN WALT
The Belt and Road initiative is again overhyped. It’s not going to be the reliable tool of influence China is hoping for. The principal way that makes it a source of influence has been through bribery. When the Chinese come in and invest in a country, there is a lot of money being paid to various people along the way. They like having that investment come in because it enriches them. They may want to do nice things for China because they want to keep that money flowing in. But that’s about it. After China builds a dam or a railway or some port facilities, they can’t threaten to take it apart and ship it back to China if the host country doesn’t do what they demand. Remember, there is also a long history of Western countries investing in other economies and then discovering that didn’t give them full political control.
SOLI ÖZEL
Two of your recent articles in Foreign Policy were about Syria. In the first one, you laid out your original position and then asked if a few years later it was still valid. Then, in the second piece you answered your own question in the affirmative. I remain unconvinced that the position you took, which highlighted that not doing much because we cannot do much, was the right position.
STEPHEN WALT
I view the Syrian situation as one where reasonable people could disagree on what the American course of action should be. It was a hard call. The Obama administration felt it was a hard call. There were people in the administration who argued that we needed to do more, be more actively involved backing the opposition to Assad. We did back it, by the way, but we did not go "all in" to overthrow Assad.
I believe what stayed Obama’s hand was Libya. There was a mess there and if you have created a mess you bear some responsibility.
SOLI ÖZEL
The Powell doctrine right: "You break it you own it".
STEPHEN WALT
Exactly, so you should be extra careful about what you decide to break. Powell’s real message was about Iraq: "don’t do this unless we absolutely, positively have to". But there is another concern: "don’t make things worse". Yes, we created a mess in Iraq and that led to the formation of ISIS. Although what was happening in Syria was only partly related to what we had done in Iraq. The question was whether doing more in Syria would make that situation better or make it worse. And Obama’s judgment and my judgment -which could be wrong- was that for the US to get more actively involved at that stage would have made things worse. If we removed the Assad government we would have created anarchy there. We’d have to put in 100 thousand troops or more to police the place.
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