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Thucydides Trap not etched in stone(3)

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2015-08-20 08:54China Daily Editor: Si Huan

Use reason, not idealism, to judge U.S.

The "pivot to Asia" policy of the U.S. was born out of the fear of China's rise and, for the same reason, some Asian countries have chosen to side with the U.S.. Which means the Thucydides Trap is already a reality in Asia. Therefore, how China will react, to a large extent, will decide whether the Asia-Pacific region will remain peaceful or witness a war.

If China and the U.S. decide to go in for a direct strategic competition with each other in the Asia-Pacific, it could lead to a conflict.

Many of China's diplomatic and policy discourses vis-a-vis the U.S. are designed to prevent falling into the Thucydides Trap. The Chinese leadership has repeatedly emphasized that it does not believe in such a trap. But, to avoid a war, China cannot only rely on discourses.

China must find the right way to avoid the trap. It needs to discard its idealist stance on the U.S., and have a better knowledge of other countries. The more realistically China sees the U.S. and its alliances with other countries, the more likely it will avoid a war. And China can take solace because, contrary to the Thucydides Trap, there have been examples of peaceful transitions, from established to rising powers.

Yet China's association with and influence on the other Asian countries have been weaker than the U.S.'. China renewed its relations with Asia with the start of the reform and opening-up in the late 1970s. And only after the U.S. diverted its attention from Asia to the anti-terrorism war in the Middle East that China began increasing its trade and interactions with the rest of Asia. Still, China's rising influence in Asia has made the U.S. worried that it could be driven out of the region.

The fact, however, is that China-U.S. ties still have a lot of room for cooperation when it comes to Asia. As long as China does not intend to challenge the U.S., it has no cause for worry. But for this, what China needs most is reason, not idealism.

The author Zheng Yongnian is a researcher in politics at Singapore National University.

  

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