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Published in: Journal of Chinese Political Science 3/2021

24-02-2021 | Research Article

To Engage or Not to Engage? Explaining the Logic of the US’s China Strategy in the Post-Cold War Era

Author: Xiaodi Ye

Published in: Journal of Chinese Political Science | Issue 3/2021

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Abstract

The United States’ (US) changing policy towards China has become one of the most attractive issues in contemporary international politics. To explore the reasons underlying these changes, existing studies adopt four schools of explanation, i.e., status competition, institutional competition, failure of engagement, and domestic factors. Each school provides valuable theoretical insights. However, existing studies have obvious problems with single attribution and, thus, fail to formulate a causal mechanism explaining the long-term trajectory of the US’s China strategy. By recategorizing America’s unilateral perception of China as reformist, revolutionary, status quo and positionalist, which extends beyond the revisionist-status quo dichotomy, this article develops a systemic explanatory model and process tracing of the transition of US’s China policy during the post-Cold War period to explain the theoretical logic underlying the changes. This article argues that the positional change and the US’s unilateral perception of China are the two main factors triggering changes in the US’s China strategy. China’s foreign behavior, as the intervening variable, strengthens or weakens the government’s perception of China and, thus, determines the US’s strategic choices, i.e., whether to pursue a policy of containment, competition, precaution, congagement, engagement, or accommodation. Four comparative case studies are presented to demonstrate how this article’s explanatory model can be applied.

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Footnotes
1
Organski pointed out that the international order produces the anticipations of states’ foreign behaviors, rules and patterns, which may be gradually accepted by the state actors to maintain the stable inter-state relations.
 
2
The three principles include: (1) a stable, open and successful China meet America’s interest; (2)US supports China to engage in the international society; (3) Solving the divergences through communication.
 
3
Although a constructive strategic partnership should be promoted by both sides, it was difficult to image that such a relationship could be achieved without Washington’s recognition. Thus, if Clinton’s administration did not perceive China as a status quo power at this stage, the concept of a constructive strategic partnership would not appear.
 
4
Notably, while Bush never claimed his “strategic competitor” perception of China in official documents, such as the National Security Strategy Report or National Defense Strategy Report, the Bush administration applied this revolutionary perception to Washington’s China policy before 911, which was vividly demonstrated in several key incidents, including the US’s determination to defend Taiwan at any cost.
 
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Metadata
Title
To Engage or Not to Engage? Explaining the Logic of the US’s China Strategy in the Post-Cold War Era
Author
Xiaodi Ye
Publication date
24-02-2021
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Journal of Chinese Political Science / Issue 3/2021
Print ISSN: 1080-6954
Electronic ISSN: 1874-6357
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11366-021-09726-7

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