Mostrando postagens com marcador China. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador China. Mostrar todas as postagens

quarta-feira, 23 de novembro de 2016

China se opõe a Donald Trump e se aproxima de países da América Latina


























Folha SP - Mundo
JOHANNA NUBLAT
23 nov 2016

Enquanto o presidente eleito Donald Trump fala em fechar as fronteiras americanas, expulsar imigrantes e minimizar a presença do país em parcerias regionais, o líder chinês, Xi Jinping, desembarcou na América Latina com o discurso de compartilhar avanços e receber países em seu "trem expresso do desenvolvimento".

Xi iniciou na semana passada a terceira visita à América Latina desde sua posse em 2013. Na viagem, foi ao Equador e ao Peru -em Lima, participou da cúpula da Apec (Cooperação Econômica Ásia-Pacífico)- e começou nesta terça (22) a viagem ao Chile, onde encerra a turnê.

"Todos os países são igualmente membros da comunidade internacional. O grande, forte e rico não deve intimidar o pequeno, fraco e pobre", disse o chinês nesta segunda-feira (21), durante visita a Lima.

Já em Santiago, Xi se encontrou com a presidente Michelle Bachelet e disse que entendimentos colocam em evidência a disposição de enfrentar juntos desafios "perante novas circunstâncias".

Durante a Cúpula dos Meios de Comunicação da China e América Latina, promovida pelos chineses em Santiago, em paralelo à visita oficial, Xi disse que seu país pretende organizar um intercâmbio, na China, para jornalistas latino-americanos e do Caribe, o que pode beneficiar até 500 profissionais.

A mensagem levada por Xi pode não diferir do discurso padrão de um líder de Estado em viagem, mas não deixa de se mostrar uma contraposição às promessas raivosas e isolacionistas de Trump.




















Na segunda (21), o republicano afirmou que, em seu primeiro dia de governo, vai retirar os Estados Unidos da Parceria Transpacífico, negociada por Barack Obama e vista como forma decisiva de influência americana no Pacífico, em contraposição aos chineses (que não estão incluídos na parceria e têm suas próprias ambições na região).

Para Greg Johnson, da Universidade de Valparaíso, a mensagem da China como alternativa aos EUA não virá de maneira explícita, apesar de os interesses chineses na região serem claros.

"Se o governo Trump se tornar o mais fechado do mundo, isso cria abertura para a China ter maior influência na região", afirmou à Folha.

E a forma como a abordagem dos chineses é feita, segundo Johnson, pretende evitar a imagem de potência neo-colonial, como acabou ocorrendo na África.
















































































































"É o momento de construir pontes, não muros. De abrir mercados, e não fechá-los" disse Alicia Bárcena, secretária-executiva da Cepal (Comissão Econômica para América Latina e o Caribe), durante o encontro de imprensa.

Ela afirma ainda que, mesmo levando em conta os altos investimentos chineses e o fluxo comercial, é preciso pensar que há várias alternativas a uma eventual retirada americana. "Devemos concentrar esforços para conseguir uma maior integração interna."

Na estada no Peru, Xi mencionou ainda mais "oportunidades" de verba chinesa para o mundo. Segundo a Xinhua, o presidente disse que a expectativa para os próximos cinco anos é investir US$ 750 bilhões no exterior.

VERBA ESTRATÉGICA

Evan Ellis, pesquisador do Instituto de Estudos Estratégicos da US Army War College e especialista na relação entre os chineses e os latino-americanos, diz que, mesmo que os interesses da China fossem puramente econômicos, eles ainda devem ser vistos como estratégicos.

"O mais importante para os chineses agora é o crescimento continuado e a diversificação da economia, manter 1,35 bilhão de pessoas alimentadas", diz. "Na China, quando o império perde a bênção do céu, é quando a dinastia cai."

Além disso, afirma Ellis, para os chineses é relevante a manutenção da multipolaridade. "A sobrevivência e a prosperidade de países como o Equador, a Venezuela ou a Bolívia, que resistem ao modelo dos EUA, estão em seu interesse estratégico."

Para Ellis, o Equador é um caso emblemático do investimento chinês na região, já que fez um uso produtivo do capital chinês. "Relativamente ao tamanho de sua economia, é o país em que empresas chinesas e o financiamento mais penetraram."

Roberto Fendt, secretário-executivo do CEBC (Conselho Empresarial Brasil-China), diz que Trump criou para a China uma oportunidade "absolutamente incrível", mesmo que não cumpra inteiramente as difíceis promessas da campanha.

E, independentemente do "efeito Trump", diz ele, a expectativa é de crescimento da presença chinesa na região e, particularmente, no Brasil (que tem o benefício da escala frente aos vizinhos).

"Difícil saber a intensidade, mas parece claro que a presença chinesa não vai diminuir nem estancar", afirma Fendt.

fonte: Folha SP

quinta-feira, 7 de janeiro de 2016

How Will China Respond to North Korea's Nuclear Test ?






















Looking back at history to predict how Xi Jinping will respond to Pyongyang’s latest provocation.

The Diplomat
8 jan 2016

North Korea (also known as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, or DPRK) claims to have conducted a successful thermonuclear test on Wednesday morning (06 jan). 

While experts are already contesting the claim that a thermonuclear device was detonated, it does appear that North Korea tested a nuclear device of some kind, with a yield similar to the previous test in February 2013. 

Now the question is how the international community will respond – and that response will largely be dictated by the way China, North Korea’s traditional partner and a veto-wielding permanent member of the UN Security Council, chooses to react.

The official position from China’s Foreign Ministry was crystal clear – China “firmly opposes” the nuclear test, spokesperson Hua Chunying said in a routing press conference. 

“China is steadfast in its position that the Korean Peninsula should be denuclearized and nuclear proliferation should be prevented to maintain peace and stability in Northeast Asia… We strongly urge the DPRK to honor its commitment to denuclearization, and to cease any action that may deteriorate the situation,” Hua continued.

Hua also emphasized that China had not known about the test in advance. She said “experts” were conducting analysis to verify whether or not the device was a hydrogen bomb, as North Korea claimed.

Hua hinted at the possible ill effects on China, saying that China’s Environmental Protection Ministry would be monitoring radiation data along the China-North Korea border to ensure the safety of Chinese citizens. The Punggye-ri nuclear test site, close to where the test was conducted, is in northeastern North Korea, roughly 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the Chinese border.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi also referenced China’s “stern position” on the nuclear test in a speech given at the ministry’s annual New Year reception. He described the test as “in disregard of international opposition” and reiterated that China is “firmly committed to upholding the international nuclear non-proliferation regime.”

North Korea’s last nuclear test, in February 2013, sparked a similarly stern response from Beijing. Yang Jiechi (then serving as foreign minister) summoned North Korea’s ambassador to China for a dressing-down over the test. 

Reports indicated that China’s government had actively tried to persuade North Korean leader Kim Jong-un not to move forward with the nuclear test, as China was still in the midst of its once-in-a-decade leadership transition (Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang, who had taken up the Chinese Communist Party’s top leadership roles in November 2012, would not be officially named president and premier until the National People’s Congress in March 2013).

In response to the 2013 test, China backed a new round of UN sanctions on North Korea. 

On March 7, less than a month after the test, the UN Security Council unanimously passed Resolution 2094, expressing “the gravest concern” at the nuclear test and condemning it “in the strongest terms.” The resolution applied sanctions to North Korean financial institutions, laid down travel restrictions on certain North Korean leaders, and limited the import of luxury goods.

The groundwork is laid for a more robust reaction in 2016. In the three years since North Korea’s last nuclear test, China has simultaneously grown closer to South Korea and farther away from North Korea. To cite just one example, Xi and South Korean President Park Geun-hye have held six summit meetings in those three years, while Xi has never met North Korea’s Kim Jong-un.

In fact, the China-North Korea relationship seems to have never quite recovered from the 2013 nuclear test. Ties just seemed to be getting back on track in the fall of 2015, with Choe Ryong-hae’s attendance at China’s military parade in September 2015 and Liu Yunshan’s visit to Pyongyang in October. 

But then in December, the two countries had another spat over a series of planned musical performances, resulting in two North Korean groups packing up and going home.
Despite tensions, however, Beijing is far from ready to ‘abandon’ North Korea

Ultimately, China still remains committed to seeking a solution to the North Korean nuclear problem through dialogue (either a return to the Six Party Talk or an as-yet unclear alternative grouping), rather than punitive measures. 

Beijing has gone on the record numerous times against the concept of sanctions in general; though China has proven willing to hold its nose and go along with UN Security Council sanctions in the wake of North Korean nuclear tests, that’s likely to be the limit to China’s cooperation.

And history indicates that if the response to North Korea’s nuclear test is simply more sanctions, it’s unlikely to have any real impact on the regime. In 2013, the United States was pleased with China’s cooperation at the UN; then-U.S. 

Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice told reporters, “These sanctions will bite and bite hard.” But, as demonstrated by Wednesday’s test, the sanctions haven’t been able to stem the slow but steady development of North Korea’s nuclear program – in part because they aren’t being enforced fully, particularly by China.

Whether this represents a deliberate government effort to secretly back North Korea, or whether Chinese bureaucrats simply aren’t equipped to catch profit-minded companies willing to flaunt the sanctions is unclear. 

Regardless, experts agree North Korea has had little issue getting access to supposedly banned Western technologies via Chinese companies. As Joel Wit of the U.S.-Korea Institute put it in a presentation on North Korea’s nuclear futures last year, there’s little evidence that sanctions have actually affected Pyongyang’s ability to access nuclear technologies. 

fonte: The Diplomat

quinta-feira, 18 de junho de 2015

China Becomes Main Destination for Brazilian Oil

Folha International
jun 9, 2015

China becomes main destination for Brazilian Oil, more than tripling imports







China has more than tripled its imports of Brazilian oil this year (2015), making it the world's leading consumer outside of Brazil.
This comes as Petrobras steps up its deals with China in order to guarantee finance. Last month, Petrobras obtained US$7 billion in credit with Chinese banks.
From January to May, 5.4 million tonnes of oil were sent to China, 35% of all Brazilian oil exports. It is the largest purchase hitherto made by a single country in an equivalent period of time.
The volume of oil sent to China was more than double that exported to the United States, which was the largest importer in 2014.
The increase in exports to China has helped Brazil to reach record sales of oil this year. In total, more than 15 million tonnes had been exported by May - a rise of 80% compared to the same period of 2014.
In spite of this, revenues were down. The price of a barrel of oil has fallen by nearly 40% in the last 12 months.
The trend also increases Brazil's dependency on Chinese demand. Of the ten main Brazilian exports, China is now the largest buyer of four (the others being soya, iron ore and cellulose).
Trade between Brazil and China has accelerated over the last decade, with the increasing prices of raw materials on the world market providing the momentum.
In 2000, sales to China were worth little more than US$1 billion. Last year, this figure stood at US$40 million, fuelled by soy and mineral exports.

fonte: Folha SP

domingo, 19 de abril de 2015

China and US: Unthinkable War ?


Might the US and China be repeating the mistakes that led to the improbable wars of the past ?

The Diplomat
April 10, 2015

If the United States is the colossus that bestrides the world, its command to history is simple: Stop. The problem with America’s imperative is, as distinguished Yale historian Paul Kennedy remarked in 2010, “history, unfortunately, has a habit of wandering off all on its own.”
A recent diplomatic episode shows that this is a lesson the U.S. remains uninterested in learning. As readers of The Diplomat will know, in 2010, the IMF, with the support of the Obama Administration, passed a series of reforms that would shift member quota shares (and voting rights) to reflect the dynamics of a changing world economy, especially the economic growth of the BRICS grouping (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa). 
For the past five years, the U.S. Congress has refused to ratify the IMF reform because many Republicans are generally dubious about international financial cooperation and because they fear it would give China more influence while decreasing U.S. influence (the second argument is prima facie spurious, as America would still remain the only member state with veto powers). 
As a result of Republican intransigence on the question of reform, the IMF is becoming less relevant to world economic cooperation. This has led IMF chief Christine Lagarde to proclaim “I will do belly-dancing if that’s what it takes to get the US to ratify.” But not even that threat was able to sell reform to the Republican Senate.
This episode is telling because it reverses the narrative the U.S. has created about China’s rise. Since 2005 the U.S. has constantly pressured China to become a “responsible stakeholder.” U.S. President Barack Obama has accused China of being a global “free rider.” 
But as IMF reform makes clear, the U.S. – or more precisely, large political blocs within the U.S. – doesn’t actually want to share a stake of its power with China: It likes the division of world power the way it is and sees no reason to allow any change. China is rising. Rather than adjust structures and relationships to this reality, it is nicer to pretend nothing needs to change.
But the world is changing. Its bid for integration rejected, China has begun constructing its own system to run parallel to the U.S.-built system. In 2014 the BRICS nations, which comprise 3 billion people and around 20 percent of world GDP, launched their own $100 billion New Development Bank. Also in 2014, China launched an Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), another $100 billion institution. 
More than 50 nations have applied to join the AIIB so far according to the Global Times, and more will in the future, as Asia needs $8 trillion in infrastructure investment this decade alone. Regional and global enthusiasm for China’s initiative peeved the U.S., which pressured its allies not to join the bank. It has now become clear that this pressure has failed spectacularly. 
Ignoring U.S. protests, Britain announced it would join. France, Germany, and Italy quickly followed suit (later followed by South Korea and Australia), provoking a cry of outrage from a “senior US official” who insisted, “We are wary about a trend toward constant accommodation of China, which is not the best way to engage a rising power.”
It is this belief that brings us to the newly published book The Improbable War: China, The United States and Logic of Great Power Conflict by London School of Economics international relations professor Christopher Coker. Coker’s thesis is straightforward: War between China and the U.S. “is not inevitable, but nor is it as improbable as many experts suggest.” 
He argues that the kind of American attitude displayed above makes war more likely and that the leaders on both sides of the Pacific need to think carefully about the lessons of two other seemingly improbable wars in order to preserve peace today.
AD 1914 & BC 431
Why do historical analogies matter? Coker’s view of history mirrors that of the great historian John Lukacs: History cannot teach us what to do, but it can show us what to avoid doing. No analogy is exact, but if history really does rhyme, then studying it can reveal some lessons in meter and form. 
In this spirit he writes, “If we are fated to always speculate about the future we are also fated to recall the past and the historical analogy that would seem most pertinent as we try to understand how Chinese-US relations might evolve remains that of the First World War.”
The main lesson Coker derives from WWI is the danger of optimistically assuming war is unlikely. He extensively critiques Norman Angell’s belief that war was irrational, though not always convincingly. But his principal point cannot be questioned: “just because something is irrational does not mean it cannot happen.” 
Coker agrees with Christopher Clark’s recent magisterial telling of WWI in which Europe’s leaders sleepwalked into war. To this account he adds that the optimism that war was not probable allowed Europe’s leaders to ignore the tensions in the system, allowing disagreements to fester. 
When the crisis finally broke out in July 1914, no great power sought to manage it. As a result, war came.
The second analogy Coker considers is that of the Peloponnesian War (431-404 BC), the ancient fratricide between Athens and Sparta that ended the Athenian Golden Age. The Peloponnesian War matters both because it has an important lesson to teach and because that lesson is often misunderstood. 
Consider the 2012 remarks of Martin Dempsey, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff:
Well, first of all, I think it’s probably worth mentioning where I see our future with China. I mean, we’re bouncing – we’re bouncing ourselves back into the Pacific. That’s not a containment strategy for China. In fact, I don’t know how many of you study history, but Thucydides, the Greek historian, described what he called the “Thucydides Trap,” and it goes something like this: It was Athenian fear of a rising Sparta that made war inevitable.
Well, I think that one of my jobs as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs and as an adviser to our senior leaders is to help avoid a “Thucydides Trap.” We don’t want the fear of that emerging China to make war inevitable. So Thucydides – we’re going to avoid “Thucydides Trap.” And I think there’s more opportunities than liabilities for us in the Pacific.
Though it is a welcome occurrence for a figure as important as General Dempsey to consider the lessons of history, as a simple matter of fact he confused the position of Athens and Sparta: it wasn’t a “rising Sparta” that was at issue but a rising Athens. Thucydides’ famous line is “The growth of the power of Athens, and the alarm which this inspired in Lacedaemon, made war inevitable” (Thucydides 1.23). 
But either way, this sentence of Thucydides is often taken to be the final explanation for the war: a shift in power caused fear, making war became inevitable.
Coker eloquently remedies this highly simplified reading of Thucydides, arguing that the actual lesson of Thucydides is: Do not allow your state to be manipulated into war. This accords with the story Thucydides actually tells: Neither Athens nor Sparta sought war, but somehow war came. 
Athens was convinced by another city-state, Corcyra, to protect it from the interference of a Spartan ally, Corinth. The Corinthians then convinced the Spartans to intervene on their side against the rapacious Athenians, and thus a “war like no other” began. A shift in power may or may not have been a necessary condition for the Peloponnesian War. But the way in which Athens and Sparta were manipulated by their lesser allies surely was.
The Path to a US-China War
Are the U.S. and China walking the road to war today? Insofar as the U.S. insists that the status quo should not be adjusted, and insofar as China seeks assertively to change the status quo, Coker thinks the answer is yes. 
This is what he means by the title of his book. War is certainly not inevitable, but two questions Coker asks should worry statesmen in both countries: “Can China accept and continue to negotiate with a country that wants the Chinese regime to change and considers any government model but its own largely illegitimate? Can the United States deal constructively with a China which is so resentful of its past and confident about its future?”
Chinese leaders seemingly understand the potential danger their nation’s rapidly rising power poses for the stability of the global system and have, because of the lessons of history, proposed constructing a “new model of major country relations” with the U.S. 
According to Coker, American leaders and scholars have responded to this call with either hostility or consternation. Hostility because the U.S. would prefer not to think of China as its equal, and consternation because the Chinese have not been able to specify of what their requested “innovations in diplomatic theory and practice” would consist.
Where does this leave the U.S. and China in regards to the path to war? “The precondition of a Sino-American war is most likely to be the rivalry between a dominant power and one that seeks to take its place; the precipitant, China’s attempts to undermine the relationship between the U.S. and its allies/client states; but the trigger could well be naval spats, bullying that goes too far.” 
In short, though 2015 is a very different – and in most ways better – time than 1914, many of the conditions for conflict are currently present. U.S.-China competition has been obviously present since the 1995-6 Taiwan Straits Crisis. Since 2010 China has been seen as growing more “assertive.” 
In 2011 the U.S. “pivoted” to Asia, a concentrated political, economic, and military effort to contain China’s growing power in all but name. Nationalism is on the rise in China and Japan, and it is imaginable that a dispute between these two countries over rocks in the East China Sea, fueled by nationalism and historical antagonism, could cause a crisis that forced the U.S. either to escalate a conflict with China or surrender its so-called “credibility.” 
Obama has already drawn a red line by stating the U.S.-Japan defense treaty covers the Senkaku islands. What would happen if China were to put the line to the test like Assad did in Syria? Would the pressure of American hawks be too much to resist a second time?
The Path to a US-China Peace 
Yet if there is a path to war, there is also a path to peace in East Asia. Though it is not a popular position today, Coker believes that if U.S. is serious about avoiding war then it must negotiate with China to revise the current international system. 
“All the lessons of history suggest that the US needs to share the burden with China if both countries are to avoid a conflict; the two sides urgently need to enter into a dialogue to also decide which if any of the ‘rules’ need to be changed.” 
What specifically does this mean? Coker provides only the hint of an answer: What would the U.S. think if China stationed crack soldiers in Venezuela, established bases around America’s continental and maritime periphery, conducted maritime intelligence patrols just outside of America’s 12-mile territorial waters, and negotiated a massive new trade deal that included all the major regional states except the U.S.? 
Undoubtedly America’s leaders would not tolerate this. In any new negotiated system, it is this sort of behavior Americans will have to eliminate.
More broadly, Coker suggests six ideas for moving the U.S. and China down the road to peace. Both sides should place less faith in the regional actor model of political decision-making; they should realize that humans are not good at deciding what is in their best interest and often make mistakes; the two nations should conduct cultural dialogues and exchanges; they should avoid a naval arms race like the one that preceded the Great War; neither side should militarize space; and both sides must think carefully about cyberwar so as not to be caught by surprise in the event of a conflict.
Is It Enough?
Coker thinks the U.S. and China have a 50/50 chance of avoiding war. Needless to say, this is not an optimistic projection and not one that makes war sound particularly “improbable.” 
Consider Coker’s explanation for how, while reflecting on the Great War, he came up with the criteria for what makes a war “improbable”: 
Jack Beatty, one of the leading figures in the ‘new school’ of historians, distinguishes three stances with regard to the origins of the war—avoidable, improbable and inevitable. War would only have been ‘avoidable’ if the political leaders had set out to do everything in their power to avoid it. They did not do so, in part because they thought it so unlikely. War would only have been ‘improbable’ if they realized how only remarkable crisis management skills could have kept the continent at peace given the tinder box nature of European politics. It therefore follows that war was largely ‘inevitable’ because the politicians did not take the prospect of war seriously enough.
Though Coker does not make this connection, this threefold division corresponds nicely to the three ways to manage conflict. 
You can (1) resolve the issues in dispute through negotiation and compromise, therefore eliminating the cause of conflict; (2) work to control conflict by creating crisis management protocols and practices, therefore working to ensure a crisis does not become a war; or (3) you can reduce the consequences of a war through arms control and the spread of norms, therefore (hopefully) lessening the lethality of war when it breaks out. 
Within elite American circles today, almost all emphasis is placed on the second option: crisis management. During the U.S.-Soviet Cold War, emphasis was also placed on the third option. Option two can only make war “improbable” while option three can only reduce the consequences of war. 
War can only be made avoidable if both the U.S. and China pursue option one: Working to overcome the disagreements that are the cause of contemporary friction by negotiating a new great power consensus.
Making war avoidable should not be dismissed as a utopian pursuit. The U.S. has chosen to be a colossus that bestrides the world and says stop. But nothing forces it to adopt this position. 
Realizing that history does indeed wander off on its own, that power shifts, that the status quo cannot be enshrined as holy, and that it is time to build a new consensus with China would permit American statesmen to begin stepping off the road to war and onto the road to peace. 
If you are unconvinced of these points, I suggest you read Coker’s book. If you are convinced, it is time to move to the next stage of the argument: How should a new consensus be built? 
Upon what principles should it rest? Does history offer any examples of great-power cooperation that could become models for constructing such a new consensus today? The precondition for making war avoidable instead of improbable is answering these questions.
Jared McKinney is a dual-degree graduate student at Peking University and the London School of Economics and holds an M.S. (with distinction) in Defense and Strategic Studies from Missouri State University, where he was a Rumsfeld Graduate Fellow.
fonte: The Diplomat 
  


terça-feira, 10 de março de 2015

China and Russia versus the United States ?


























The Diplomat
2 mar 2015

Just how likely are China and Russia to ally against the U.S.?


The rising tensions between Russia and the West, especially the United States, over Ukraine provide a constant reminder of the Cold War, when the two superpowers fought proxy conflicts for spheres of influence. A key question in the current game of great power politics is whether China and Russia will form an alliance against the United States?
In his Foreign Affairs article “Asia for the Asians: Why Chinese-Russian Friendship is Here to Stay,” Gilbert Rozman listed six reasons why the Chinese-Russian partnership is durable. 
However, Joseph Nye, in a recent piece published in Project Syndicate titled “A New Sino-Russian Alliance?” questioned the possibility by pointing to deep problems for a Sino-Russian alliance in the economic, military and demographic spheres.
Both Rozman and Nye are, in fact, looking at different sides of the same coin. However, both have missed something. The future of a China-Russian relationship depends largely on relations these two countries have with the West, especially the United States. 
If Washington pushes too hard on oil prices, Ukraine, and NATO expansion toward Russia, and if the U.S. rebalances too far against China in the Pacific, China and Russia may indeed move towards a formal alliance, even if that may not have been what they originally wanted.
One Mountain, Two Tigers
Both Chinese President Xi Jingping and Russian President Putin are strong leaders with aspirations to recapture past glories. Xi’s new foreign policy features strong positions over the East China Sea disputes with Japan and the South China Sea disputes with Southeast Asia. 
As the world has witnessed, Putin has been aggressive over Crimea and eastern Ukraine. Both Xi and Putin believe that their states were unfairly treated in the past and are uncomfortable with the current international order.
However, these similarities do not suggest that the two leaders will simply stand together. As the old Chinese saying goes, one mountain cannot contain two tigers. Although both Xi and Putin are pursuing national rejuvenation, the two nations have historically not gotten along. 
Although neither Xi nor Putin like the Western world order led by America, they do not share a common vision of a so-called new world order.
In particular, Beijing did not bend to Moscow even during the Cold War when both states belonged in the communist camp. Although facing tremendous economic difficulties caused by Western sanctions after the Ukraine crisis, the Russians have made it clear that what they need is China’s diplomatic support and not economic assistance.
Even though both countries face domestic ethnic challenges, in Chechnya and Xinjiang respectively, when it comes to the 2008 War in Georgia, China’s lukewarm position due to its own concerns over Taiwan, Xinjiang and Tibet has made some Russians uncomfortable. Even though Xi and Putin might be in the same bed against the West, their dreams are clearly different.
Trade Imbalances and Strategic Ramifications
Economic ties are a key factor in the China-Russian relationship. Bilateral trade has been rising steadily, reaching $95 billion in 2014, very close to the $100 billion goal set for 2015. In 2014, Russia signed a thirty-year, $400 billion deal that will see as much as thirty-eight billion cubic meters of Russian gas go to China annually from around 2018 to 2047.
However, even the strongest ties between the two countries are problematic in nature. First, China-Russia trade remains highly imbalanced for it is limited to mainly three items: oil, gas and arms. 
The EU is still Russia’s leading trading partner while the U.S. is China’s (if Hong Kong is excluded). Although China is Russia’s second largest trading partner, Russia only ranks eighth forChina, with just 2 percent of China’s total trade volume. 
In other words, although both China and Russia may despise the West, China cannot sacrifice the U.S. market, and Russia can’t give up on Europe.
Second, the energy deals between the two nations are not really a “win-win” situation because of mutual concerns over their relative gains. It seems that Western economic sanctions against Russia have pushed Russia to seal energy deals with China, which in return met China’s booming needs for energy and resources. 
However, both countries understand that overdependence means potential vulnerability.
China has tried to diversify its oil supply by stepping up its economic cooperation with Central Asia, traditionally Russia’s backyard. Russia has also sought to expand its energy market with other Asian countries, such as Japan, India, Mongolia, South Korea, and Vietnam (even North Korea). 
Intentionally or not, Russia’s energy cooperation with some Asian countries somehow made China uncomfortable strategically. For example, Russia’s 2012 energy deal with Vietnam in the South China Sea, where China has claimed its undisputed sovereignty, was seen as a “stab in the back” by some Chinese analysts. 
In the same vein, Russia has deep concerns that China’s “silk road economic belt” across Central Asia will undermine Russia’s geopolitical influence in Eurasia.
Last but not least, Russia’s arms trade with China. Certainly, Russia is China’s most important supplier of weapons and military technology, but it is an open secret that Russia has been hesitant to transfer advanced military technology to China – a potential competitor. 
The S-400 missile system deal in late 2014 is widely seen as a practical financial decision instead of a strategic one. Russia’s military cooperation with China’s neighbors, such as Vietnam, entails strong deterrence and balancing ramifications toward China in the South China Sea. 
For example, Russia has sold three kilo-class submarines to Vietnam since 2009, which are more advanced than the vessels China obtained from Russia.
Irreconcilable Identities
China is an Asian power with global ambitions. Russia has historically defined itself as a European power, although it recently started its own pivot toward Asia. The two nations share a bitter and bloody history. After the Cold War, though, they seemed to find new chemistry in defending against U.S. hegemony. 
China and Russia established a strategic partnership in the late 1990s while the U.S. was extending its unipolar system. However, the strategic partnership between China and Russia was widely seen as an “axis of convenience,” with only symbolic gestures as both countries kept an eye on improving relationships with the United States even as they made public pledges against the hegemon. 
In other words, the so-called strategic partnership between China and Russia is simply a diplomatic tool for both nations to compete for more attention from the United States after the Cold War.
Even in the post-unipolar moment, China and Russia remain competitors rather than true partners.  As a rising power, China is gaining more international say and influence, while Russia seems to be losing same, as was seen at the recent APEC and G20 meetings in 2014. 
Although both countries are having their issues with the West right now, sooner or later tensions will rise between them. Their uneasy relations within the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) suggest the potential for strategic and economic competition in Central Asia and the even deeper problem of their irreconcilable interests over regional domination.
Three to Tango?
As always, power politics is still the major game in town. Another chapter in the rise and fall of the great powers – this time played by the United States, China, and Russia – has just opened. It is too early to categorize China-Russia relations as either a “partnership” or an “alliance,” because there are no permanent friends in world politics, only permanent interests. 
Despite the positive trends, the bilateral relationship still lacks a solid foundation of mutual trust and common identity. Only a strong common threat from the West could push China and Russia to move closer economically and militarily. This is in the hands of U.S. policymakers. 
Continue to prod Xi and Putin and they may indeed see a military alliance or at least a close partnership between Beijing and Moscow.
To avoid, the United States needs to consider how to re-set its relationships with Russia and China. For Russia, isolation and sanctions might not be the solution for the Ukraine crisis. For China, the U.S. needs to reconsider its Asia rebalance. Xi will visit Washington in September, a good opportunity for some relationship building. 
Although furious competition among the United States, China and Russia is probably inevitable, a delicate balance of power is the essence of diplomacy. In the context of world affairs, it may take three to have a peaceful tango.
Huiyun Feng is senior researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies and Associate Professor of Political Science at Utah State University. She is the author of Chinese Strategic Culture and Foreign Policy Decision-Making: Confucianism, Leadership and War (Routledge, 2007) and the co-author of Prospect Theory and Foreign Policy Analysis in the Asia Pacific: Rational Leaders and Risky Behavior (Routledge, 2013).
fonte: The Diplomat




terça-feira, 24 de fevereiro de 2015

Why India should resuscitate IBSA




















PostWestern World 
17 fev 2015

If asked to identify the most important trend in international affairs since the turn of the century, many international affairs analysts would point to the unprecedented growth in South-South relations. 

That is largely due to the rise of China, which has transformed global trade flows: South-South trade has overtaken North-South trade, and China is the most important trading partner of virtually the entire developing world.

Long-term agreements like the one between China and Argentina (regarding infrastructure, nuclear power plants, military and satellite equipment, commodity payment schemes and an $11 billion currency swap) are set to proliferate in the coming years. Similar agreements exist with Venezuela, which has borrowed $50 billion from Chinese banks since 2007. 


All that will consolidate both China's  economic and political influence in the Global South. The fact that a growing number of world leaders, under pressure from China, have spurned or downgraded meetings with the Dalai Lama is just one reflection of this trend.

Seen from Delhi, China's growing global influence is both an opportunity and a threat. On the one hand, growing fear of China's hegemonic ambitions has turned India into the darling of US policy makers who see a strong India as the best bet to contain China in its region (a similar logic applies to India's ties to Russia and Japan). 


On the other hand, as it seeks to strengthen its economic presence in the Global South, India will find it increasingly difficult to compete with a well-entrenched Chinese presence in Africa, Asia and Latin America. 

Last year, Modi met many Latin American heads of state, but it occurred during the 6th BRICS Summit in Fortaleza, and hence under the shadow of Xi Jinping's presence. A similar dynamic dominated the 5th BRICS Summit in Durban, when Modi's predecessor met several African leaders.

India's economic clout is still far smaller than China's, yet with India's growth potential in mind, foreign policy makers in Delhi are already building  a network of partnerships and platforms the country will need in the coming decades to sustain its ambitions. 


One example is the India-Africa Forum Summit (IAFS), which underlines India's long-term plans on the world's fastest-growing continent. In the same way, IBSA, the trilateral grouping consisting of India, Brazil and South Africa, provides an important opportunity for India to regularly consult with two leading regional powers in Africa and South America.

IBSA, however, is now largely dormant due to a combination of the BRICS grouping's success and domestic crises in Brazil and South Africa. 


Both Presidents Rousseff and Zuma preside over a toxic mix of economic stagnation, stubbornly high inequality and corruption scandals, which have dramatically reduced their foreign policy ambitions. Indeed, seen from Delhi, neither Brazil nor South Africa currently look like very attractive partners.

And yet, there are strong arguments for Modi to assume leadership and resuscitate the IBSA grouping. Over the past decade, the platform has allowed the three countries to cooperate in an unprecedented range of issues such as public health, global governance reform, and economic development. 


In 2011, IBSA sent a delegation to Syria in an attempt to negotiate a ceasefire with the Assad regime. The three governments set up their own development fund, which, though small, has been praised for its innovative practices. 

There are now 16 working groups on issues such as agriculture, defense and public administration, made up of policy makers from each countries' ministries. 

Put simply, IBSA reduces, at a very small cost, mutual ignorance between three of the most important democracies in the Global South, providing member countries with a platform to cooperate whenever it is in their common interest.

The crises in Brazil and South Africa will pass, but it may take several years before the two countries can return to the foreign policy activism of the Lula/Mbeki years. 


Modi, by contrast, possesses ample political capital (despite the recent electoral setback in Delhi) to assume international leadership and undertake foreign policy initiatives. It thus depends largely on him to follow-up on his promise to host the next IBSA Summit in Dehli in 2015.  Of course, IBSA will never be a centerpiece of India's foreign policy. 

Yet as China's economic and diplomatic influence increases in the developing world, India would be well-advised to invest in autonomous platforms and networks that can help it strengthen its partnerships in the Global South in the long-term.

fonte: Post Western World

domingo, 1 de fevereiro de 2015

End of "Strategic Opportunity Era" for China



Why 2016 Could Be a Nightmare for China

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