US’ Futile Containment of China, by Finian Cunningham

China Industry

Image by AK Rockefeller via Flickr

by Finian Cunningham
Writer, Dandelion Salad
Ireland
Crossposted from Sputnik, Feb. 28, 2021
March 1, 2021

America’s global power depends on a strategy of “containment” towards China. Containment is just a euphemism for aggression, hostility and confrontation. And such a strategy is bound to fail.

State planners in Washington seem to think that a Cold War policy towards China will deliver the same kind of victory that America claimed against the Soviet Union.

A recent set-piece article published by the influential Atlantic Council argued for “containment” of China which would subordinate and eventually bring about regime change in Beijing. The objective is to make the United States the sole global hegemonic power with no other competitor.

The problem with such thinking is that applying Cold War strategy is futile in today’s world. Containment of the Soviet Union may have succeeded for the Americans because during that era the world was largely a bipolar division of power. Also, the Soviet Union was a relatively closed entity in terms of economic relations with the rest of the world.

Today, the world is wholly different. Instead of a bipolar configuration, there is the reality of a multipolar world. The global economy is much more integrated and China – set to become the largest national economy – is a key exporter, importer, investor and market.

The previous Trump administration launched a trade war against China three years ago in an attempt to bully China into submission. But that policy failed. Trump only ended up hurting American producers and consumers which reflects the reality of how the American economy – like much of the world – is dependent on China. Trump’s trade war was tantamount to cutting your nose off to spite your face. It was a folly of arrogance and no intelligence.

The new Biden administration is equally obsessed with trying to contain China, which shows how presidents in the US come and go but the deep state planners and imperial policy remain.

Biden may have dropped Trump’s trade war rhetoric and tactics, but as the Atlantic Council article cited above indicates, Washington is still pursuing the objective of damaging and weakening China to furnish a government in Beijing that is subordinate to American global power ambitions.

American corporate capitalism depends on acquiring global dominance. Partnership, cooperation and multilateralism are anathema to the workings of US capital. This is why the American planners must defeat China and any other perceived rival.

But the reality of a multipolar world and integrated global economy makes the American Cold War strategy obsolete.

Unlike Trump’s “America First” doctrine, Biden and the Democrats have a softer, seemingly more amenable approach to Western allies. Biden talks about “engaging” with allies and revamping the transatlantic alliance.

However, this new “engagement” is all about Washington trying to enlist Western allies in a hostile camp towards China so as to better achieve American objectives.

At both the G7 summit and Munich Security Conference earlier this month, Biden repeatedly flagged up China and Russia as adversaries and threats for the Western “allies”.

The trouble for Biden and his deep state handlers is that Western allies cannot afford to accommodate his policy of isolating China and Russia. It is detrimental to their own self-interests.

As the Global Times commented this week: The vitality of the Chinese economy is unstoppable… For the world, detaching from the Chinese market is becoming more and more inconceivable than detaching from the US market”.

China is now the biggest trading partner for the European Union, having surpassed the United States. China is a key market for Germany’s export-led economy and Germany is the de facto leader of the EU. Russia is also essential for supplying Germany and Europe with affordable secure energy.

There is no way that Washington’s attempts to polarise the world as it did with the Soviet Union will succeed. It is futile. The multipolar world that China and Russia often speak of is a reality, which means partnership and cooperation between nations is the only viable way forward.

American power is like a lumbering dinosaur living in a world whose political and economic environment has been transformed. It’s a beast whose modus operandi has expired and no longer applicable.

There is of course the danger of military confrontation prompted by a desperate waning American power facing extinction. But fortunately, China and Russia are formidable military powers which America cannot realistically conceive of attacking. (How damnable that such a contingency could even be contemplated, but that’s the nefarious nature of American power for you).

Which leaves us with this consideration. If US power-play against China (and Russia) is futile and war is inconceivable, what will become of America?

If it wants to avoid internal collapse – a process of decay already underway – American society and its capitalist economy must in some way be radically transformed into a more democratic, egalitarian and drastically less militarist economy. Can the American people mobilise for this challenge?


Finian Cunningham, is a columnist at the Strategic Culture Foundation, Sputnik, and a Writer on Dandelion Salad. He can be reached at cunninghamfinian@gmail.com.

From the archives:

The Ruling Class Wants Us To Accept War As Never-ending, by Rainer Shea

Chris Hedges: China Is Not Our Enemy

U.S. Spends 11 Times What China Does on Military Per Capita, by David Swanson

Michael Hudson: Changes in Superimperialism: The Position of the USA and China in our Global Economic System

John Pilger: The Coming War On China (must-see)

8 thoughts on “US’ Futile Containment of China, by Finian Cunningham

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  7. What indeed will become of America? Actually it would be even more realistic to say, of the Americas ~ from South pole to the far North. The sooner whole Earth geography comes into proper (indigenous) focus, the better.

    We live in mutually interdependent and reciprocating ecosystems. The old notions of economic dominance no longer align with the advanced knowledge we can now claim about the way our shared biosphere functions. This is the true New World: a dynamic planetary environment that can no longer be adequately described nor elucidated in terms of restrictive political maps and desperately redundant ideologies. There is no way of escaping this nested actuality; it is the truest ‘new normal.’ Waging costly and ecologically devastating wars will certainly not help advance this understanding; such imprudent stupidity will only aggravate, not resolve the problems we face.

    A new generation of internationally reflexive minds must adapt to these new global challenges with determined commitment; wise youngsters will inevitably liberate our imaginations, showing us how to contemplate hitherto undreamed of deepening cosmic horizons, that will inspire and better guide our meditations. Creative investment in planetary habitats will surely grow exponentially, the further along this path we go; learning as we adjust ~ adapting to dramatic changes that free-up the resourceful capabilities of intelligent new thinkers; all inspired in turn by integrated experience, leading the way toward authentic prosperity, flourishing spirituality and biophilic success.

    The old habit-driven destructive systems of brutal extraction and derelict modes of dogmatic, adversarial thinking cannot begin to grasp, let alone rise to meet and master the truly immense tasks we face.

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