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ID139071
Title ProperNortheast Asia order after WWII
Other Title Information continuity, compliance, power-transition and challenges
LanguageENG
AuthorMing , Liu
Summary / Abstract (Note)
East Asia is now fully engaged in a competition between a rising China and the other powers—the United States and Japan—while the regional order is in a transition from a super primacy of the United States to the asymmetric bipolar structure of the United States and China. China is changing a lot in terms of capabilities and behavior; but China also shows its benevolence, such as benefit-sharing initiatives on regional institutionalization development. The “American rebalancing strategy” has partly reversed the overall situation in East Asia in favor of the United States, but as 57 countries have joined the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), Beijing has now recovered some ground from this overwhelming tide of the U.S. strategy. China’s military modernization and Sino-Japanese confrontation over
the Diaoyu Islands offer a big excuse and incentive for Japan’s acceleration of this process of becoming a normal country. The future of Northeast Asia lies mainly in the four variables and their interactions: the Chinese Communist Party’s capability to balance its goal of national rejuvenation and nationalistic emotion in protecting its sovereignty interests; the United States’ genuine attitude toward China’s power development; Japan’s goal of its nationalistic resurgence and its complicated strategic ties with China and South Korea; and North Korean regime stability and nuclear capability development. In spite of the Sino-American competition relations, there always exists a demand of condominium and strategic interdependence on global governance and other hot issues in the international arena. Therefore, management of China-U.S. competition is key to stability of the regional order.
`In' analytical NoteKorean Journal of Defence Analysis Vol. 27, No.2; Jun 2015: p.163–186
Journal SourceKorean Journal of Defence Analysis Vol: 27 No 2
Key WordsSan Francisco System ;  World War II ;  Post - War World Order ;  American Re-balancing Strategy ;  Sino - American Competition ;  Re-shaping the Regional Order


 
 
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