Britney Spears said:
I must confess I never understood the idea of lebensraum, as if this was some big game of Civilization where people are just numbers that move aorund on a map and produce tanks every turn or something. Most of China is already thinly populated inhospitable tundra and desert, How will seizing more inhospitable tundra solve anything? Do you think you can just pick people up in downtown Toronto, drop them off en mass in Whitehorse and instantly have another Toronto? Sometimes I think you guys only see the heavily populated coastal cities, where the action is, and assume that the rest of China is the same. Those cities have been heavily populated for 2500 years, and for a good reason. Ditto for why Chinese Siberia and Turkestan is not. Similarly, what resources exist in Siberia that are important enough to INVADE RUSSIA(you know, the one with the thousands of nukes) over? If invading Russia were that easy you'd think someone else would have tried it already, yes? ( and no, The Russo-Japanese War doesn't count because it was fought in China, not Russia) China has plenty of oil and natural gas in the western desert and in the south sea, whether they are economical compared to Saudi oil is another matter, but it's there. The only important goods that China relies on the West for are Skilled workers and capital.
Sorry, Britney Spears, I missed this.
A couple of points, beyond those which some others have made:
I think the search for a bit of
lebensraum is a well established part of Han Chinese culture. These good, sturdy people have been on the move, so to speak, in search of something better for a long, long time 3,500 years or more. Maybe not with great
migrations àla the Eurasian tribes of 2,000 years ago, but they have expanded, steadily, across China and much of Asia. In the process they weaned their culture away from
place and, starting with the
Shang, adopted a
portable written culture which allowed them to expand while still retaining their strong sense of self. A bit
airy-fairy I know but I think it matters.
Russian Siberia is a relatively - especially in Chinese terms - modern innovation. The Russians did not begin to colonize Siberia until the time of the
Kangxi emperor around the end of the 17th century. The Russian claim to Siberia was not really solidified until the mid to late 19th century - and most Chinese regard all treaties from this period as
unequal and invalid.
There are many people in China who regard the Urals, not the Yenisei as the 'natural' boundary between Europe and Asia and who regard all of North Asia as being wholly within China's
sphere of influence. While Europeans are fascinated, constantly, by Russia's
Asiatic nature, the Chinese do not accept the Russians as Asians - they are interlopers, foreigners, Westerners, who do not belong in Asia.
Anyway, 'we guys' are trying to provoke debate which, now and again leads to thought. But, you points are well taken- and it all sounds terribly like the junior common room.