China is not the reason why the US’
‘luck’ is running out
By Wang Wenwen Published: Dec 29,
2020
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202012/1211385.shtml
In a recent column in the
US magazine Foreign Policy, Professor Stephen Walt at Harvard University
asserted that America's history of luck is running out. The article is a rare
reflection of the US' problems that we have seen since the outbreak of the COVID-19
pandemic. For instance, it noted "the deliberately manufactured
polarization and the resulting gridlock" and "the fetishizing of
'liberty'" that the Americans pride themselves on but cost American lives
in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The article also recalled how the US gained its
international status in history with its "luck." Indeed, from the US
War of Independence to the Cold War, luck stood by the side of the US.
Nonetheless, American exceptionalism to a large degree should be attributed to
its exceptional luck, which breeds the US characteristics of being bellicose,
arrogant and addicted to meddling in the affairs of other countries.
Like many other US thinkers, Walt believes China,
a far more formidable rival than the Soviet Union ever was, is among the
reasons why the luck of the US might be running out. This is typical rhetoric
among the US elites. Walt admitted that "having no serious enemies
nearby" is a considerable benefit for US security. As the US attaches the
utmost importance to its own security, it imagines China as an ideological
rival despite China posing no actual threat to the US. As the global hegemon,
the US is the thirstiest for a sense of security and its guard against other
countries has always been aggressive.
China's characteristics, including the socialist
path it takes and the one-party rule it adopts, fit China's actual conditions
no matter how the US feels about them. China does not have the "luck"
the US has ever enjoyed.
The forceful imperialist invasions by the UK in
the mid-19th century and by Japan in the 1930s and 1940s saw China's territory
being ceded and people having lived in disgrace and poverty. The US troops were
also among the "Eight-Nation Alliance" that looted and pillaged Beijing
and other Chinese cities at the very beginning of the 20th century.
In the 240-year-plus history of the US, it has
never experienced such miseries. It does not respect other countries' right to
choose an independent developing path in this new era.
China is only safeguarding its right to rise
peacefully and ensures that its economic development is not jeopardized and
suppressed. In the eyes of the US, China has the potential to challenge US
hegemony, and this is enough for China to fit in the US definition of a foe.
The luck the US has been blessed with made the US
a rich country, which paved the way for the US to become an important
contributor to the world.
The US has played an indispensable role in shaping
world trade and investment and its economy has driven global entrepreneurship
and prosperity. It helped establish the postwar international liberal order,
though some scholars believe this order has never been perfectly liberal. Some
hail the US as "a beacon of freedom," but the label looks only
sarcastic throughout this year that has been marked by the ravaging epidemic in
the US. During the year of the pandemic, the US' arrogance and bossiness are clear
to all.
The US role does not match its status as a global
superpower which is supposed to act in a responsible and graceful manner. Some
believe the US is an empire going downhill. Is it really the case?
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