Is
the leadership of the US and the West within the international
community coming to an end?
Introduction:
Refer to a piece of recent news about China that suggests that US
leadership of the international community is in doubt. Contrast this
with the US role since 1945. The Bretton Woods institutions, Marshall
Plan and and Western alliance.
Line
of argument: This essay will argue that the decline of the US in
economic terms is real but exaggerated and that militarily it remains
the most powerful state. However, its real strength against any
challenge launched by China is twofold, its leadership of NATO (and
its other non-NATO allies), whose combined military and economic
resources outweigh any challengers, and its soft power in terms of
the values it shares with its allies and which are embedded in the
liberal international order.
Provide
a summary of the current size and performance of the US and Chinese
economies, the recent past and forecasts for the future. GDP in
nominal and PPP terms and then in per capita terms. Compare and
contrast including technology, research and education. China's
economic
expansionism,The
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB),
The
New Development Bank (NDB), The Belt and Road
Initiative (BRI)
and its investments in Africa.
Then add in the weight of the other Western economies and compare
again.
Compare
and contrast the US and China's military spending and assets.
China has Russian support on some issues. China is already or will be
a major regional power although its neighbors may move closer to the
US for security. Point out that the US has its NATO and other allies
and their resources far exceed those of China.
Conclusion:
It is unclear how far China really intends to challenge the current
international order or if it simply wants to play a greater role
within it. At the economic level this would be a good thing for the
global community and should be welcomed.
It
is also unclear whether the Chinese political order is an attractive
model for other states compared with the democratic model, even for
China's BRICS partners like India, Brazil and South Africa. The US
uni-polar era is over and a genuinely multi-polar order may be a
positive evolution. Argue that although the US is in relative decline
compared with China this is not true of the West as a whole and even
less true if we consider the 'West' as all those states, groups and
individuals aspiring to Western values. As regards US leadership a
different question has emerged with President Trump's administration,
not whether the US is no longer able to lead but whether it may
choose not to lead. This is another reason for a more multi-polar
approach to international relations and suggests that other Western
states, the EU in particular, may have to play a greater role in
preserving and strengthening the liberal order.
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