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If it is an error to define the West as an entity is it equally wrong to define China as an entity? I accept that it is a unitary state but it appears to be far from a "Nation-State". Can the "Red Dynasty" manage a transformation from empire to federation?
The reason for the question is that I believe that part of the reason for the stability of the west that the author identifies is that the West is comprised of States that range in size from the 300,000,000 of the US to the 900 of the Vatican. Despite the efforts of the EU the current world order makes a place for small, autonomous populations. As I have stated before, I believe that the best the EU can ever hope to be, if it erases the current national borders, is an agglomeration of variously autonomous city-states with strong internal blood and culture ties. Another form of tribalism.
The USSR dissolved. Yugoslavia dissolved. Czechoslovakia dissolved. France and Spain and Belgium and Britain are struggling against dissolution. Many of the nationalist groups within those countries openly support and are supported by the EU (the principle of subsidiarity) because they perceive the EU as a way to reduce the power of Paris, Madrid, London and Brussels. Small countries aspire to independence when they can afford it.
In a poor Chinese empire there are contradictory tendencies for communities to compete for scraps or to cooperate to take on the outside. (This is not peculiar to the Chinese. It is universal.) In a rich Chinese empire will all regions equally "float with the rising tide" of prosperity. (They don't appear to be doing so now. In Canada we struggle with the same problem ourself, despite our liberal, western traditions).
If we accept the premise of the article that China need not be an enemy even if it is a competitor/partner is it still a safe bet that Beijing will be China in 50 years time? Can Beijing continue to maintain its position of speaking for all 1,000,000,000 inhabitants it represents internationally currently? Or will Shanghai, Guangzhou and Hong Kong continue to push for more autonomy as our on, more profitable, Canadian provinces do?
Couple this with China's struggle with the ongoing dessication that began 9000 years ago and really started to bite in the hills 4-5000 years ago, concurrently with the rise of the river civilizations. It seems to me that the riverine Shang/Zhou/Qin/Han dynasties of Henan pushed down river with a successful survival strategy until they reached the sea. They eventually reached the carrying capacity of the deltas, carrying capacity which shrinks with dessication, and were forced to push up into the southern hills (which coincidentally, like Taiwan, have become wetter as the north became drier). Consequently, from where I sit, it appears to me as if the Han Chinese still have a lot of "unassimilated" members of their empire living within their borders. What are the real limits for an autonomous Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Tibet, "Western Autonomous Region" ....Taiwan?.
If China can manage the transition from a political empire of subjects to a commercial empire of partners then I think that Ikenberry has a point. But if China chooses to pursue a traditional military/political empire as a counter to the internal centrifugal forces does't it risk going the way of the Soviet Union with all the attendant dangers that presents?
It is my personal belief that our western dynasts never went away. They just figured out how to maintain their lifestyles without the personal expense of maintaining standing armies. The cities of the Bourbons, Hapsburgs, Plantagenets, Tudors, Stewarts and Oldenburgs, and the dynastic Houses they carried, are as prosperous as ever. If not moreso.
The reason for the question is that I believe that part of the reason for the stability of the west that the author identifies is that the West is comprised of States that range in size from the 300,000,000 of the US to the 900 of the Vatican. Despite the efforts of the EU the current world order makes a place for small, autonomous populations. As I have stated before, I believe that the best the EU can ever hope to be, if it erases the current national borders, is an agglomeration of variously autonomous city-states with strong internal blood and culture ties. Another form of tribalism.
The USSR dissolved. Yugoslavia dissolved. Czechoslovakia dissolved. France and Spain and Belgium and Britain are struggling against dissolution. Many of the nationalist groups within those countries openly support and are supported by the EU (the principle of subsidiarity) because they perceive the EU as a way to reduce the power of Paris, Madrid, London and Brussels. Small countries aspire to independence when they can afford it.
In a poor Chinese empire there are contradictory tendencies for communities to compete for scraps or to cooperate to take on the outside. (This is not peculiar to the Chinese. It is universal.) In a rich Chinese empire will all regions equally "float with the rising tide" of prosperity. (They don't appear to be doing so now. In Canada we struggle with the same problem ourself, despite our liberal, western traditions).
If we accept the premise of the article that China need not be an enemy even if it is a competitor/partner is it still a safe bet that Beijing will be China in 50 years time? Can Beijing continue to maintain its position of speaking for all 1,000,000,000 inhabitants it represents internationally currently? Or will Shanghai, Guangzhou and Hong Kong continue to push for more autonomy as our on, more profitable, Canadian provinces do?
Couple this with China's struggle with the ongoing dessication that began 9000 years ago and really started to bite in the hills 4-5000 years ago, concurrently with the rise of the river civilizations. It seems to me that the riverine Shang/Zhou/Qin/Han dynasties of Henan pushed down river with a successful survival strategy until they reached the sea. They eventually reached the carrying capacity of the deltas, carrying capacity which shrinks with dessication, and were forced to push up into the southern hills (which coincidentally, like Taiwan, have become wetter as the north became drier). Consequently, from where I sit, it appears to me as if the Han Chinese still have a lot of "unassimilated" members of their empire living within their borders. What are the real limits for an autonomous Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Tibet, "Western Autonomous Region" ....Taiwan?.
If China can manage the transition from a political empire of subjects to a commercial empire of partners then I think that Ikenberry has a point. But if China chooses to pursue a traditional military/political empire as a counter to the internal centrifugal forces does't it risk going the way of the Soviet Union with all the attendant dangers that presents?
It is my personal belief that our western dynasts never went away. They just figured out how to maintain their lifestyles without the personal expense of maintaining standing armies. The cities of the Bourbons, Hapsburgs, Plantagenets, Tudors, Stewarts and Oldenburgs, and the dynastic Houses they carried, are as prosperous as ever. If not moreso.