US-China rivalry rooted in lost trust

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
8 Min Read

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As early as 2005 John Gersham and Melvin Goodman alerted against the trend of an over-militarized US foreign policy. The warning has been a recurrent theme of American debate, although it gained little traction.

The debate recently spilled into mainstream media with The Economist averring that “an over-militarized foreign policy that embraces unrealistic objectives is liable to fail.” In fact, in the past, it was clear that politics was the overarching concern, and recourse to using the military was just one of its tools.

There were agreements in diplomacy buttressed by economic or commercial benefits. Investments, technological transfers, migration, education, etcetera were cheaper tools than the military, which was and remains extremely expensive and thus should be avoided at all costs.

The Cold War and the possibility of a totally destructive nuclear conflict brought about the extreme unlikelihood of recourse to traditional war, for fear of uncontrolled escalation. But this opened the possibility of other, different kinds of attrition.

The Cold War went as far as erasing a clear distinction between war and peace. There are now many forms of war: influence war, political war, commercial war, cyberwar, psychological war.

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