1. Between Compromise and Enterprise: Opportunities and Challenges of Chinese Foreign Policy after the Iraq War.
- Author
-
Yiwei Wang
- Subjects
- *
DIPLOMACY , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *NATIONAL security , *ECONOMIC development , *COUNTERTERRORISM - Abstract
Is diplomacy an art of compromise or enterprise? This is the main challenge towards today’s Chinese foreign policy especially its American policy. The paper argues that the key to this question is how to manage the two basic goals: security and development. During the Iraq war, China focused on development factor more than security one. For the development means oil supply and Iraq market demand; the security factor has three basic meanings of state-power-will. Based on a survey on How Chinese View the Iraq War, one can see that China won the hard power in the short term and lost its soft power in the long term. The paper argues in the second part that from the Iraq war we can see that China considers the U.S. both as opportunities (which focus on America’s investment and export market) and challenges (America’s anti-terrorism campaign makes pressures on China’s strategic security environment) and explores what this means to the future Chinese-American relationship and international politics? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004