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        <title><![CDATA[The Chinese Virus is springing the Thucydides trap]]></title>
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        <lastBuildDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2020 16:40:03 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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            <media:title type="html">The Chinese Virus is springing the Thucydides trap</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>War isn’t inevitable, until it is</p><p>The first casualty of informational war is  truth. The first American casualty of COVID-19 was the myth that the  United States can ‘manage’ the rise of China as a world power through  mutual interest. That mutual interest was only ever economic. Naturally,  most of our politicians, business leaders and commentators explained it  as strategic too: as technocracy calls GDP the index of human  happiness, so it identifies strategic interests with economic ones. The  coronavirus crisis has, however, exposed an essential strategic  antagonism between the United States and China.</p><p>‘‘What made war inevitable was the growth of Athenian power and the fear which this caused in Sparta,’ Thucydides wrote in <em>History of the Peloponnesian War</em>. In <em>Destined for War</em> (2017), Graham Allison argued that established powers attack rising  powers in order to preempt their own eclipse. COVID-19 is the latest in a  series of factors that are dissolving common interests, worsening  strategic stresses, and pushing America and China into what Allison  calls the ‘Thucydides trap’. On Tuesday, President Trump shifted from  praising China’s response to COVID-19 to speaking of the ‘Chinese  virus’. On the same day, the Chinese foreign ministry revoked visas for Americans reporting for the <em>Wall Street Journal</em>, the <em>New York Times</em> and the <em>Washington Post</em>.</p><p>The  closing of borders must necessarily lead to the contraction of supply  chains. So must the closure of options and expectations. The United  States government keeps its military supply chains within its borders in  the interest of national security. For similar reasons, the United  States pressures allies not to develop their own military industries and  to buy American weaponry instead. This is a strategic interest,  domestically and globally. The same should have gone for the medical  supply chain. But it didn’t. Outsourcing the production of medicines and  medical equipment is now revealed for what it was: greedy, reckless and  feckless.</p><p>This Chinese virus is not the common cold,  but the COVID-19 blame game is producing a cold war. The American people  blame the Chinese people for eating strange food and buying it at wet  markets, and American media blame the Chinese government for not  reacting quickly enough to the outbreak at Wuhan. Zhao Lijian, a  spokesman for China’s foreign ministry, blames the US military: ‘It  might be US army who brought the epidemic to Wuhan,’ Lijian tweeted in  Chinese and English last Thursday. ‘Be transparent! Make public your  data! US owe us an explanation!’ The PRC habitually monitors and scrubs  China’s social media sites, but it allows this and other conspiracy  theories to circulate online. On Monday, Mike Pompeo issued a <em>demarche</em> to China’s foreign ministry, expressing ‘strong US objection to efforts to shift blame for COVID-19’.</p><p>The
 US’s strategic posture toward China has already shifted under the Trump
 administration. If the COVID-19 death toll in the United States is high
 and the economic damage significant, that shift will accelerate, and 
quickly. The US is already caught in great power rivalry with China in 
the Pacific rim, while at the same time being excluded from the 
Chinese-led order that is developing in central Asia. A shift into open 
antagonism means both sides taking rapid steps into the ‘Thucydides 
trap’.</p><p>Thucydides, being a historian, 
used ‘inevitable’ in hindsight. But war isn’t inevitable, until it is. 
In four of Allison’s 16 case studies from the last 500 years, 
statesmanship stopped the trap from springing. There’s also the problems
 of reliable information and accurate interpretation. Where Tacitus 
praises the German tribes in order to implicitly criticize the decay of 
republican spirit in Rome, and Rousseau idealizes the Spartans to 
criticize the unmanly&nbsp;<em>ancien règime&nbsp;</em>of the Bourbons, Thucydides
 the Athenian blames the rise of an&nbsp;intolerable rival. But the true 
cause, Donald Kagan argued, may have been closer to home.</p><p>The ruling classes of Athens and Sparta had, Kagan argued in his&nbsp;<em>New History of the Peloponnesian War</em>,
 avoided conflict by close co-ordination: an ancient analogue to Niall 
Ferguson’s mutual-interest ‘Chimerica’, which now resembles a fantasy, 
like the ancient Greek&nbsp;<em>chimera</em> after which it was named. To 
Kagan, it was less the rise of Sparta that caused the war, and more the 
rise of aggressive leaders either unable to control popular anger, or 
determined to manipulate it for their own advantage. But that couldn’t 
happen here, right?</p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[GAGmen]]></dc:creator>
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