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美国必须接受现实 与其他国家平起平坐

(2023-06-29 04:37:37) 下一个

霸权的终结让现实主义者感到困惑:美国必须接受其损失

https://mikescrafton.com/2020/09/25/the-end-of-hegemony-confounds-the-realists/

2020 年 9 月 25 日 Mike Scrafton 作者:Mike Scrafton,全球、国际关系

埃尔布里奇·科尔比和罗伯特·D·卡普兰对《意识形态错觉:美国与中国的竞争与教条无关》的回应,发表于 2020 年 9 月 4 日《外交事务》杂志上。

如果将这种关系视为一场意识形态斗争,就有可能使这种竞争成为“一场存在主义的笼子比赛”。

埃尔布里奇·科尔比和罗伯特·D·卡普兰最近在《外交事务》上发表的文章是对中美竞争框架的重要补充。 他们指出,将这种关系视为一场意识形态斗争是非常现实的风险,并指出以这种方式理解它就会使这种竞争成为“一场存在主义的笼子比赛”。 埃尔布里奇和卡普兰认为,“将竞争主要视为意识形态往往会将另一个国家的每一次骚乱变成对哪种政治制度更优越的考验”。 他们声称,这会引发冲突和灾难。 到目前为止,一切都很好。

科尔比和卡普兰对中美竞争性质的另一种理解本质上是一种现实主义的建构。 美国必须抵制中国对亚洲的经济统治,因为最终这将意味着美国霸权的终结。 如果美国被拒绝进入亚洲“巨大的、仍在增长的市场”,它“将成为中国强制杠杆的牺牲品,美国的繁荣并最终面临安全威胁”。 这似乎夸大了事实,并且忽视了美国和中国建立牢固的经济关系所带来的互惠互利的前景。

它们大量借鉴了冷战历史,反思了“NSC-68(颇具影响力的 1950 年国家安全委员会报告)的作者,他们相信以广泛、系统的方式对抗苏联,这一信念帮助 让美国陷入越南”。 与冷战战士不同,科尔比和卡普兰认为,美国需要更清楚地了解自己的利益,而中国的政权更迭并不是一个实际目标。 他们认识到,美国希望“自由民主已传播到全世界”时,安全就会随之而来,这不能成为对华政策的驱动力,他们认为,大多数亚洲国家需要被美国纳入一项政策。 抵制中国的国家充其量是不自由的民主国家。

他们的分析是现实主义的。 科尔比和卡普兰主张一种理解和一种方法,使美国在保持最强大的经济和军事实力方面享有优先权。 文章暗示,只有占主导地位的霸权地位才能满足美国的利益,并且错误地认为大多数国家会乐于看到自己的利益服从于这一目标。

科尔比和卡普兰对竞争的解释的逻辑结果是,美国的利益应该占上风,而中国应该为了稳定的关系而“愿意尊重这些利益”,并为了繁荣和安全而牺牲自己的野心 。

科尔比和卡普兰的分析中至少有两个问题没有得到解答。 最重要的是,中国为什么会同意? 中国限制其在亚洲及其他地区的经济活动似乎没有什么好处。 中国人口众多,真正的问题是需要继续发展经济,以提高人民的繁荣、福利和安全。 目前尚不清楚为什么组织一个联盟来限制中国的经济增长并限制其进入亚洲的市场准入,这两种结果可能会危及中国的国内稳定并威胁到政权,而在意识形态上却不太可能导致对抗和冲突。 -风味竞赛。

其次,当亚洲国家加入“否认中国地区霸权的联盟”可能会影响亚洲国家从与这个巨大邻国的贸易和投资中受益的机会时,这是否符合亚洲国家的利益? 正如科尔比和卡普兰所说,如果美国应该按照自己的利益行事,那么包括中国在内的亚洲国家也应该这样做。 对美国利益的内向关注导致作者忽视了地缘政治现实。 他们认为加入反华联盟的东南亚国家大多与中国接壤。 他们的经济已经部分融入中国的经济圈。 他们的安全和经济利益更有可能通过与中国的良好关系得到满足,而不是与美国联手反对。

美国需要接受霸权丧失的现实,并以平等的身份参与世界事务

科尔比和卡普兰忽视了美国需要容纳一个在军事和经济上与美国平等的中国。 美国需要接受霸权丧失的现实,并找到一种方式与世界接触,而不仅仅是中国,作为平等的国家,做好妥协与合作的准备。

科尔比和卡普兰的文章应该引发关于所有国家(而不仅仅是中国和美国)在这个新的大国战略竞争时期所面临的性质和选择的更大辩论。 保持战略稳定并达成和平协议将取决于对所有相关方利益的理解。

ELBRIDGE COLBY is a Principal at the Marathon Initiative. He served as U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Strategy and Force Development from 2017 to 2018.埃尔布里奇·科尔比
ELBRIDGE COLBY 是马拉松倡议组织的负责人。 2017年至2018年,他担任美国负责战略和部队发展的副助理国防部长。

ROBERT D. KAPLAN holds the Robert Strausz-Hupé Chair in Geopolitics at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He is the author of The Good American: The Epic Life of Bob Gersony, the U.S. Government’s Greatest Humanitarian.
罗伯特·卡普兰
罗伯特·D·卡普兰 (ROBERT D. KAPLAN) 担任外交政策研究所地缘政治学罗伯特·施特劳斯-于佩 (Robert Strausz-Hupé) 主席。 他是《善良的美国人:美国政府最伟大的人道主义者鲍勃·杰尔尼的史诗般的一生》一书的作者。

The end of hegemony confounds the realists: the US must come to terms with its loss

https://mikescrafton.com/2020/09/25/the-end-of-hegemony-confounds-the-realists/

A response to ‘The Ideology Delusion: America’s competition with China is not about doctrine’, by Elbridge Colby and Robert D. Kaplan, published 4 September 2020 in Foreign Affairs.

To see the relationship as an ideological struggle risks making the rivalry “an existential cage match”.

Elbridge Colby and Robert D. Kaplan’s recent article in Foreign Affairs is an important addition to the framing of the contest between China and the United States. They point to the very real risks of seeing the relationship as an ideological struggle, noting that to understand it this way is to make the rivalry “an existential cage match”.  Elbridge and Kaplan argue that “[C]onstruing the competition as principally ideological tends to turn every disturbance in another country into a test of which political system is superior”. This, they claim, is a recipe for conflict and disaster. So far, so good.

The alternative understanding of the nature of the contest between the United States and China offered by Colby and Kaplan is an essentially realist construction. The United States must resist China’s economic domination of Asia because eventually it would mean the end of the United States hegemony. If the United States were denied access to “vast, still growing market” in Asia, it “would become prey to Chinese coercive leverage, with American prosperity and ultimately security in jeopardy”.  This seems to both overstate the case, and to ignore the prospect of mutual benefit from the United States and China establishing strong economic relations.

They draw heavily on the history of the Cold war, reflecting on “the authors of NSC-68 (the influential 1950 National Security Council report), [who] believed in an expansive, systemic approach to confronting the Soviet Union, a conviction that helped to entangle the United States in Vietnam”. Unlike the Cold War warriors, Colby and Kaplan argue that the United States needs a clearer understanding of its interests, and that regime change in China is not a practical objective. They recognise that the United States’ hope that security will follow when “liberal democracy has spread throughout the world” cannot be the driver of China policy, and that most of the Asian states that they argue will need to drawn by the US into a policy of resistance to China are illiberal democracies at best.

Theirs is a realist analysis. Colby and Kaplan are advocating an understanding and an approach that privileges US interests in remaining the strongest economic and military power. Implied in the article is the belief that only a dominant hegemonic status will satisfy the interests of the United States, and a misplaced belief that most states would be happy to see their own interests subordinated to this goal.

The logical consequence of the interpretation of the competition provided by Colby and Kaplan is that US interests should prevail, and that China should be “willing to respect these interests” for the sake of a stable relationship, and sacrifice its own ambitions for prosperity and security.

At least two questions are left unanswered in Colby and Kaplan’s analysis. The foremost is why would China agree? There seems to be little advantage for China to put a limit on its economic activities in Asia, and beyond. China has a large population and a genuine problem of needing to continue to grow its economy in order to lift the prosperity, welfare and security of its people. It is not clear why organising a coalition to restrict China’s economic growth and to restrict its market access to Asia, two outcomes that could endanger domestic stability in China and threaten the regime, would be any less likely to lead to confrontation and conflict than and ideologically-flavour competition.

Secondly, how is it in the interests of the Asian nations to join a “coalition to deny China regional hegemony” when such a move could affect their opportunities to benefit from trade and investment with their giant neighbour? If the United States should act in its own interests, as Colby and Kaplan argue, so should the Asian nations, including China. The inward looking focus on the United States’ interests causes the authors to overlook the geopolitical reality. The Southeast Asian states that they conceptualise as joining an anti-China coalition mostly share borders with China. Their economies are already partially integrated into China’s economic sphere. Their security and economic interests are more likely to be satisfied by good relations with China than lining up with the US against it.

The US needs to come to terms with the loss of hegemony and engage the world as an equal

What Colby and Kaplan miss is the need for the United States to accommodate a China that will be its equal militarily and economically. The United States needs to come to terms with the loss of its hegemony and find a way to engage the world, not just China, as an equal prepared to find compromise and cooperation.

The Colby and Kaplan article should provoke greater debate over the nature and options facing all countries, not just China and the United States, in this period of renewed great power strategic competition. Maintaining strategic stability, and finding a peaceful accord will depend on understanding the interests of all involved.  

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