sábado, 13 de fevereiro de 2010
China, Taiwan and the US posted to The Economist's Facing up to China
A bilateral relationship that will be defining for the remainder of the 21st. century.
China's increasing clout and confidence is already impacting the world order as we've known it thus far.
The main sticking point in Sino-US relations remains that comparatively tiny island that so bravely chartered its own course in defiance of but mainly in opposition to the communist takeover of the mother country.
It is not feasible to predict the future least of all that of China, it still being a relatively introspective country full of surprises.
The giant mainland might itself evolve politically to become a part-fledged(?) democracy - who knows(?) - in which case the Taiwanese might themselves see gain in 'rejoining' the motherland.Perhaps an arrangement based on the model found for Macao and Hong Kong - however different the histories, sizes and scale of these two territories are.
The Chinese people are a very persevering, resourceful and patient lot who often draw on their millennia-old wisdom to settle issues of the day.
As it is China and Taiwan will find an accommodation platform between themselves, Taiwan continuing to seek comfort and muscle support from the US while China vehemently protesting against what it always regarded as poky foreign interference in an internal affair.One that it would wish to settle by winning over the hearts and minds of rebellious brothers and sisters who once upon a time fled to the island.
The coming decades will take care of the divisive issues affecting the China-Taiwan relationship.
What is truly vital for the rest of the world, especially the US in this particular context, is not to drop guard by passively surrendering economically to newly rising, self-confident nation-States.
Existing imbalances should lead to a welcome correction not to a full tipping eventually spawning a new imbalance.
China's increasing clout and confidence is already impacting the world order as we've known it thus far.
The main sticking point in Sino-US relations remains that comparatively tiny island that so bravely chartered its own course in defiance of but mainly in opposition to the communist takeover of the mother country.
It is not feasible to predict the future least of all that of China, it still being a relatively introspective country full of surprises.
The giant mainland might itself evolve politically to become a part-fledged(?) democracy - who knows(?) - in which case the Taiwanese might themselves see gain in 'rejoining' the motherland.Perhaps an arrangement based on the model found for Macao and Hong Kong - however different the histories, sizes and scale of these two territories are.
The Chinese people are a very persevering, resourceful and patient lot who often draw on their millennia-old wisdom to settle issues of the day.
As it is China and Taiwan will find an accommodation platform between themselves, Taiwan continuing to seek comfort and muscle support from the US while China vehemently protesting against what it always regarded as poky foreign interference in an internal affair.One that it would wish to settle by winning over the hearts and minds of rebellious brothers and sisters who once upon a time fled to the island.
The coming decades will take care of the divisive issues affecting the China-Taiwan relationship.
What is truly vital for the rest of the world, especially the US in this particular context, is not to drop guard by passively surrendering economically to newly rising, self-confident nation-States.
Existing imbalances should lead to a welcome correction not to a full tipping eventually spawning a new imbalance.
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