Robert Zoellick: Whither China: From Membership to Responsibility?
作者:Robert Zoellick 来源:state.gov
Robert B. Zoellick, Deputy Secretary of State
Remarks to National Committee on U.S.-China Relations
New York City
September 21, 2005
As
Prepared for Delivery
Earlier
this year, I had the pleasure of making the acquaintance of Mr. Zheng Bijian,
Chair of the China Reform Forum, who over some decades has been a counselor to
China’s leaders. We have spent many hours in Beijing and Washington discussing
China’s course of development and Sino-American relations. It has been my good
fortune to get to know such a thoughtful man who has helped influence, through
the Central Party School, the outlook of many officials during a time of
tremendous change for China.
This
month, in anticipation of President Hu’s visit to the United States, Mr. Zheng
published the lead article in Foreign Affairs, "China’s
‘Peaceful Rise’ to Great Power Status." This evening, I would like to give
you a sense of the current dialogue between the United States and China by
sharing my perspective.
Some
27 years ago, Chinese leaders took a hard look at their country and didn’t like
what they saw. China was just emerging from the Cultural Revolution. It was
desperately poor, deliberately isolated from the world economy, and opposed to
nearly every international institution. Under Deng Xiaoping, as Mr. Zheng
explains, China’s leaders reversed course and decided "to embrace
globalization rather than detach themselves from it."
Seven
U.S. presidents of both parties recognized this strategic shift and worked to
integrate China as a full member of the international system. Since 1978, the
United States has also encouraged China’s economic development through market
reforms.
Our
policy has succeeded remarkably well: the dragon emerged and joined the world.
Today, from the United Nations to the World Trade Organization, from agreements
on ozone depletion to pacts on nuclear weapons, China is a player at the table.
And
China has experienced exceptional economic growth. Whether in commodities,
clothing, computers, or capital markets, China’s presence is felt every day.
China
is big, it is growing, and it will influence the world in the years ahead.
For
the United States and the world, the essential question is – how will China use
its influence?
To
answer that question, it is time to take our policy beyond opening doors to
China’s membership into the international system: We need to urge China to
become a responsible stakeholder in that system.
China
has a responsibility to strengthen the international system that has enabled
its success. In doing so, China could achieve the objective identified by Mr.
Zheng: "to transcend the traditional ways for great powers to
emerge."
As
Secretary Rice has stated, the United States welcomes a confident, peaceful,
and prosperous China, one that appreciates that its growth and development
depends on constructive connections with the rest of the world. Indeed, we hope
to intensify work with a China that not only adjusts to the international rules
developed over the last century, but also joins us and others to address the
challenges of the new century.
From
China’s perspective, it would seem that its national interest would be much
better served by working with us to shape the future international system.
If
it isn’t clear why the United States should suggest a cooperative relationship
with China, consider the alternatives. Picture the wide range of global
challenges we face in the years ahead – terrorism and extremists exploiting
Islam, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, poverty, disease – and
ask whether it would be easier or harder to handle those problems if the United
States and China were cooperating or at odds.
For
fifty years, our policy was to fence in the Soviet Union while
its own internal contradictions undermined it. For thirty years, our policy has
been to draw out the People’s Republic of China. As a result,
the China of today is simply not the Soviet Union of the late 1940s:
· It does not seek to spread radical,
anti-American ideologies.
· While not yet democratic, it does not see
itself in a twilight conflict against democracy around the globe.
· While at times mercantilist, it does not see
itself in a death struggle with capitalism.
· And most importantly, China does not believe
that its future depends on overturning the fundamental order of the
international system. In fact, quite the reverse: Chinese leaders have decided
that their success depends on being networked with the modern world.
If the Cold
War analogy does not apply, neither does the distant balance-of-power politics
of 19th Century Europe. The global economy of the 21st Century
is a tightly woven fabric. We are too interconnected to try to hold China at
arm’s length, hoping to promote other powers in Asia at its expense. Nor would
the other powers hold China at bay, initiating and terminating ties based on an
old model of drawing-room diplomacy. The United States seeks constructive
relations with all countries that do not threaten peace and security.
So if the
templates of the past do not fit, how should we view China at the dawn of the
21st Century?
On both
sides, there is a gulf in perceptions. The overwhelming priority of China’s
senior officials is to develop and modernize a China that still faces enormous
internal challenges. While proud of their accomplishments, China’s leaders
recognize their country’s perceived weaknesses, its rural poverty, and the
challenges of political and social change. Two-thirds of China’s population –
nearly 900 million people – are in poor rural areas, living mostly as
subsistence farmers, and 200 million Chinese live on less than a dollar a day.
In China, economic growth is seen as an internal imperative, not as a challenge
to the United States.
Therefore,
China clearly needs a benign international environment for its work at home. Of
course, the Chinese expect to be treated with respect and will want to have
their views and interests recognized. But China does not want a conflict with
the United States.
Nevertheless,
many Americans worry that the Chinese dragon will prove to be a fire-breather.
There is a cauldron of anxiety about China.
The U.S. business
community, which in the 1990s saw China as a land of opportunity, now has a
more mixed assessment. Smaller companies worry about Chinese competition,
rampant piracy, counterfeiting, and currency manipulation. Even larger U.S.
businesses – once the backbone of support for economic engagement – are
concerned that mercantilist Chinese policies will try to direct controlled
markets instead of opening competitive markets. American workers wonder if they
can compete.
China needs
to recognize how its actions are perceived by others. China’s involvement with
troublesome states indicates at best a blindness to consequences and at worst
something more ominous. China’s actions – combined with a lack of transparency
– can create risks. Uncertainties about how China will use its power will lead
the United States – and others as well – to hedge relations with China. Many
countries hope China will pursue a "Peaceful Rise," but none will bet
their future on it.
For example,
China’s rapid military modernization and increases in capabilities raise
questions about the purposes of this buildup and China’s lack of transparency.
The recent report by the U.S. Department of Defense on China’s military posture
was not confrontational, although China’s reaction to it was. The U.S. report
described facts, including what we know about China’s military, and discussed
alternative scenarios. If China wants to lessen anxieties, it should openly
explain its defense spending, intentions, doctrine, and military exercises.
Views about China
are also shaped by its growing economic footprint. China has gained much from
its membership in an open, rules-based international economic system, and the
U.S. market is particularly important for China’s development strategy. Many
gain from this trade, including millions of U.S. farmers and workers who
produce the commodities, components, and capital goods that China is so
voraciously consuming.
But no other
country – certainly not those of the European Union or Japan – would accept a
$162 billion bilateral trade deficit, contributing to a $665 billion global
current account deficit. China – and others that sell to China – cannot take
its access to the U.S. market for granted. Protectionist pressures are growing.
China has
been more open than many developing countries, but there are increasing signs
of mercantilism, with policies that seek to direct markets rather than opening
them. The United States will not be able to sustain an open international
economic system – or domestic U.S. support for such a system – without greater
cooperation from China, as a stakeholder that shares responsibility on
international economic issues.
For example,
a responsible major global player shouldn’t tolerate rampant theft of
intellectual property and counterfeiting, both of which strike at the heart of
America’s knowledge economy. China’s pledges – including a statement just last
week by President Hu in New York – to crack down on the criminals who ply this
trade are welcome, but the results are not yet evident. China needs to fully
live up to its commitments to markets where America has a strong competitive
advantage, such as in services, agriculture, and certain manufactured goods.
And while China’s exchange rate policy offered stability in the past, times
have changed. China may have a global current account surplus this year of
nearly $150 billion, among the highest in the world. This suggests that China’s
recent policy adjustments are an initial step, but much more remains to be done
to permit markets to adjust to imbalances. China also shares a strong interest
with the United States in negotiating a successful WTO Doha agreement that
opens markets and expands global growth.
China’s
economic growth is driving its thirst for energy. In response, China is acting
as if it can somehow "lock up" energy supplies around the world. This
is not a sensible path to achieving energy security. Moreover, a mercantilist
strategy leads to partnerships with regimes that hurt China’s reputation and
lead others to question its intentions. In contrast, market strategies can
lessen volatility, instability, and hoarding. China should work with the United
States and others to develop diverse sources of energy, including through clean
coal technology, nuclear, renewables, hydrogen, and biofuels. Our new Asia
Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate – as well as the bilateral
dialogue conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy and China’s National
Development and Reform Commission – offer practical mechanisms for this
cooperation. We should also encourage the opening of oil and gas production in
more places around the world. We can work on energy conservation and
efficiency, including through standards for the many appliances made in China.
Through the IEA we can strengthen the building and management of strategic
reserves. We also have a common interest in secure transport routes and
security in producing countries.
All nations
conduct diplomacy to promote their national interests. Responsible stakeholders
go further: They recognize that the international system sustains their
peaceful prosperity, so they work to sustain that system. In its foreign
policy, China has many opportunities to be a responsible stakeholder.
The most
pressing opportunity is North Korea. Since hosting the Six-Party Talks at their
inception in 2003, China has played a constructive role. This week we achieved
a Joint Statement of Principles, with an agreement on the goal of
"verifiable denuclearization of the Korean peninsula in a peaceful manner."
But the hard work of implementation lies ahead, and China should share our
interest in effective and comprehensive compliance.
Moreover, the
North Korea problem is about more than just the spread of dangerous weapons.
Without broad economic and political reform, North Korea poses a threat to
itself and others. It is time to move beyond the half century-old armistice on
the Korean peninsula to a true peace, with regional security and development. A
Korean peninsula without nuclear weapons opens the door to this future. Some 30
years ago America ended its war in Viet Nam. Today Viet Nam looks to the United
States to help integrate it into the world market economic system so Viet Nam
can improve the lives of its people. By contrast, North Korea, with a 50
year-old cold armistice, just falls further behind.
Beijing also
has a strong interest in working with us to halt the proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction and missiles that can deliver them. The proliferation of
danger will undermine the benign security environment and healthy international
economy that China needs for its development.
China’s
actions on Iran’s nuclear program will reveal the seriousness of China’s
commitment to non-proliferation. And while we welcome China’s efforts to police
its own behavior through new export controls on sensitive technology, we still
need to see tough legal punishments for violators.
China and the
United States can do more together in the global fight against terrorism.
Chinese citizens have been victims of terror attacks in Pakistan and
Afghanistan. China can help destroy the supply lines of global terrorism. We
have made a good start by working together at the UN and searching for
terrorist money in Chinese banks, but can expand our cooperation further.
China pledged
$150 million in assistance to Afghanistan, and $25 million to Iraq. These
pledges were welcome, and we look forward to their full implementation. China
would build stronger ties with both through follow-on pledges. Other countries
are assisting the new Iraqi government with major debt forgiveness, focusing
attention on the $7 billion in Iraqi debt still held by Chinese state
companies.
On my early
morning runs in Khartoum, I saw Chinese doing tai chi exercises. I suspect they
were in Sudan for the oil business. But China should take more than oil from
Sudan – it should take some responsibility for resolving Sudan’s human crisis.
It could work with the United States, the UN, and others to support the African
Union’s peacekeeping mission, to provide humanitarian relief to Darfur, and to
promote a solution to Sudan’s conflicts.
In Asia,
China is already playing a larger role. The United States respects China’s
interests in the region, and recognizes the useful role of multilateral
diplomacy in Asia. But concerns will grow if China seeks to maneuver toward a
predominance of power. Instead, we should work together with ASEAN, Japan,
Australia, and others for regional security and prosperity through the ASEAN
Regional Forum and the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.
China’s
choices about Taiwan will send an important message, too. We have made clear
that our "one China" policy remains based on the three communiqués
and the Taiwan Relations Act. It is important for China to resolve its
differences with Taiwan peacefully.
The United
States, Japan, and China will need to cooperate effectively together on both
regional and global challenges. Given China’s terrible losses in World War II,
I appreciate the sensitivity of historical issues with Japan. But as I have told
my Chinese colleagues, I have observed some sizeable gaps in China’s telling of
history, too. When I visited the "918" museum at the site of the 1931
"Manchurian Incident," I noted that the chronological account jumped
from 1941 to the Soviet offensive against Japan in August 1945, overlooking the
United States involvement in the Pacific from 1941 to 1945! Perhaps we could
start to ease some misapprehensions by opening a three-way dialogue among
historians.
Clearly,
there are many common interests and opportunities for cooperation. But some say
America’s commitment to democracy will preclude long-term cooperation with
China. Let me suggest why this need not be so.
Freedom lies
at the heart of what America is… as a nation, we stand for what President Bush
calls the non-negotiable demands of human dignity. As I have seen over the 25
years since I lived in Hong Kong, Asians have also pressed for more freedom and
built many more democracies. Indeed, President Hu and Premier Wen are talking
about the importance of China strengthening the rule of law and developing
democratic institutions.
We do not
urge the cause of freedom to weaken China. To the contrary, President Bush has
stressed that the terrible experience of 9/11 has driven home that in the
absence of freedom, unhealthy societies will breed deadly cancers. In his
Second Inaugural, President Bush recognized that democratic institutions must
reflect the values and culture of diverse societies. As he said, "Our
goal… is to help others find their own voice, attain their own freedom, and
make their own way."
Being born
ethnically Chinese does not predispose people against democracy – just look at
Taiwan’s vibrant politics. Japan and South Korea have successfully blended a
Confucian heritage with modern democratic principles.
Closed
politics cannot be a permanent feature of Chinese society. It is simply not
sustainable – as economic growth continues, better-off Chinese will want a
greater say in their future, and pressure builds for political reform:
· China has one umbrella labor union, but waves
of strikes.
· A party that came to power as a movement of
peasants now confronts violent rural protests, especially against corruption.
· A government with massive police powers
cannot control spreading crime.
Some in China
believe they can secure the Communist Party’s monopoly on power through
emphasizing economic growth and heightened nationalism. This is risky and
mistaken.
China needs a
peaceful political transition to make its government responsible and
accountable to its people. Village and grassroots elections are a start. They
might be expanded – perhaps to counties and provinces – as a next step. China
needs to reform its judiciary. It should open government processes to the
involvement of civil society and stop harassing journalists who point out
problems. China should also expand religious freedom and make real the
guarantees of rights that exist on paper – but not in practice.
Ladies and
Gentlemen: How we deal with China’s rising power is a central question in
American foreign policy.
In China and
the United States, Mr. Zheng’s idea of a "peaceful rise" will spur
vibrant debate. The world will look to the evidence of actions.
Tonight I
have suggested that the U.S. response should be to help foster constructive
action by transforming our thirty-year policy of integration: We now need to
encourage China to become a responsible stakeholder in the international
system. As a responsible stakeholder, China would be more than just a member –
it would work with us to sustain the international system that has enabled its
success.
Cooperation
as stakeholders will not mean the absence of differences – we will have
disputes that we need to manage. But that management can take place within a
larger framework where the parties recognize a shared interest in sustaining political,
economic, and security systems that provide common benefits.
To achieve
this transformation of the Sino-American relationship, this Administration –
and those that follow it – will need to build the foundation of support at
home. That’s particularly why I wanted to join you tonight. You hear the voices
that perceive China solely through the lens of fear. But America succeeds when
we look to the future as an opportunity, not when we fear what the future might
bring. To succeed now, we will need all of you to press both the
Chinese and your fellow citizens.
When
President Nixon visited Beijing in 1972, our relationship with China was
defined by what we were both against. Now we have the opportunity
to define our relationship by what are both for.
We have many
common interests with China. But relationships built only on a coincidence of
interests have shallow roots. Relationships built on shared interests and shared
values are deep and lasting. We can cooperate with the emerging China of today,
even as we work for the democratic China of tomorrow.
来源时间:2020/3/31 发布时间:2005/9/21
旧文章ID:21131