Just been reading this and I think there are some fundamental flaws in Mearsheimer's reasoning, and I think it's important to rebut these, before they become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
He only looks at dominance from a military point of view, and therefore thinks that China's neighbours "will work overtime to try to contain China and prevent it from dominating Asia."
However, China is already in the position of being the world's largest economy in terms of output, and is the world's largest trading nation AND is now also the world's largest outbound investor. Note that China already sits at the centre of all the trade flows in Asia.
And if we follow Mearsheimer's thought experiment of a future China which is wealthy and developed in say 20+ years, it will be some 3x larger than the US or the rest of Asia.
Then we will end up with a situation where the health of the Chinese economy and access to the Chinese economy is paramount for every Asian country, whilst access to the US economy would merely be nice to have.
Therefore the China's economic dominance in Asia will prevent the US from creating an effective balancing coalition in Asia, because China will have so many economic levers to show its displeasure at countries who think of doing so.
And that economic pain is simply not worth it, given that China has reached the natural limits of its territorial expansion and knows it. To the North is freezing Siberia, in the West are the sparsely populated Muslim steppes and deserts, to the South are the Himalayan mountains and the jungles of SE Asia.
Remember that China rules a territory which is the same size as the USA which spans a continent.
So the remaining territorial disputes comprise uninhabited Himalayan borderlands with India, Taiwan, and a bunch of small insignificant islands in the SCS/ECS.
I also take offense at Mearsheimer's view that China should be kept poor, as everyone in the world should have the opportunity to pursue a happy and prosperous life.
Plus I don't see China pursuing a serious arms race with the US for the forseeable future. China is still focused intensely on internal economic development, so they're devoting less than half as much as the US spends on the military. But that still gives China significant military capabilities.
And if we look at the USSR, Imperial Germany or Imperial Japan - they looked at building huge militaries in order to dominate their surroundings - but their economies were never large enough to sustain a dominant military force.
In comparison, China does have the prospect of building a dominant military force in Asia. But that military force will only come into being if China's economy becomes much larger and wealthy - and we've already seen how China (now and in the past) is adept at using its economy to overawe its neighbours and modify their behaviour with both sticks and carrots.
So I don't simply don't see China following the USSR, Imperial Germany or Imperial Japan and making the same mistake of going down the military dominance route - when the economic route offers far more leverage and options that China can actually use.
He only looks at dominance from a military point of view, and therefore thinks that China's neighbours "will work overtime to try to contain China and prevent it from dominating Asia."
However, China is already in the position of being the world's largest economy in terms of output, and is the world's largest trading nation AND is now also the world's largest outbound investor. Note that China already sits at the centre of all the trade flows in Asia.
And if we follow Mearsheimer's thought experiment of a future China which is wealthy and developed in say 20+ years, it will be some 3x larger than the US or the rest of Asia.
Then we will end up with a situation where the health of the Chinese economy and access to the Chinese economy is paramount for every Asian country, whilst access to the US economy would merely be nice to have.
Therefore the China's economic dominance in Asia will prevent the US from creating an effective balancing coalition in Asia, because China will have so many economic levers to show its displeasure at countries who think of doing so.
And that economic pain is simply not worth it, given that China has reached the natural limits of its territorial expansion and knows it. To the North is freezing Siberia, in the West are the sparsely populated Muslim steppes and deserts, to the South are the Himalayan mountains and the jungles of SE Asia.
Remember that China rules a territory which is the same size as the USA which spans a continent.
So the remaining territorial disputes comprise uninhabited Himalayan borderlands with India, Taiwan, and a bunch of small insignificant islands in the SCS/ECS.
I also take offense at Mearsheimer's view that China should be kept poor, as everyone in the world should have the opportunity to pursue a happy and prosperous life.
Plus I don't see China pursuing a serious arms race with the US for the forseeable future. China is still focused intensely on internal economic development, so they're devoting less than half as much as the US spends on the military. But that still gives China significant military capabilities.
And if we look at the USSR, Imperial Germany or Imperial Japan - they looked at building huge militaries in order to dominate their surroundings - but their economies were never large enough to sustain a dominant military force.
In comparison, China does have the prospect of building a dominant military force in Asia. But that military force will only come into being if China's economy becomes much larger and wealthy - and we've already seen how China (now and in the past) is adept at using its economy to overawe its neighbours and modify their behaviour with both sticks and carrots.
So I don't simply don't see China following the USSR, Imperial Germany or Imperial Japan and making the same mistake of going down the military dominance route - when the economic route offers far more leverage and options that China can actually use.