Zbigniew brzezinski



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Nilufar Brzezinski-The Grand Chessboard

3. According to Yazhou Zhoukan (Asiaweek), September 25, 1994, the aggregate assets of the 500 leading 
Chinese-owned companies in Southeast Asia totaled about $540 billion. Other estimates are even higher: 
International Economy,. November/December 1996, reported that the annual in-c'ome of the 50 million 
overseas Chinese was approximately the above amount and thus roughly equal to the GDP of, China's 
mainland. The overseas Chinese were said to control about 90 percent of Indonesia's economy, 75 percent of 
Thailand's, 50-60 percent of Malaysia's, and the whole economy in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore. 
Concern over this condition even led a former Indonesian ambassador to Japan to warn publicly of a "Chinese 
economic intervention in the region," which might not only exploit such Chinese presence but which could even 
lead to Chinese-sponsored "puppet governments" (Saydiman Suryohadiprojo, "How to Deal with China and 
Taiwan," AsahiShimbun [Tokyo], September 23, 1996). 
The scope of China as a global power would most probably involve a significantly deeper southern bulge, 
with both Indonesia and the Philippines compelled to adjust to the reality of the Chinese navy as the dominant 
force in the South China Sea. Such a China might be much more tempted to resolve the issue of Taiwan by 
force, irrespective of America's attitude. In the West, Uzbekistan, the Central Asian state most determined to 
resist Russian encroachments on its former imperial domain, might favor a countervailing alliance with China, 
as might Turkmenistan; and China might also become more assertive in the ethnically divided and thus 
nationally vulnerable Kazakstan. A China that becomes truly both a political and an economic giant might also 
project more overt political influence into the Russian Far East, while sponsoring Korea's unification under its 
aegis (see map on page 167). 
But such a bloated China would also be more likely to encounter strong external opposition. The previous 
map makes it evident that in the West, both Russia and India would have good geopolitical reasons to ally in 
seeking to push back China's challenge. Cooperation between them would be likely to focus heavily on Central 
Asia and Pakistan, whence China would threaten their interests the most. In the south, opposition would be 
strongest from Vietnam and Indonesia (probably backed by Australia). In the east, America, probably backed 
by Japan, would react adversely to any Chinese efforts to gain predominance in Korea and to incorporate 
Taiwan by force, actions that would reduce the American political presence in the Far East to a potentially 
unstable and solitary perch in Japan. 
4. Symptomatic in that regard was the report published in the Bangkok English-language daily, The Nation 
(March 31, 1997), on the visit to Beijing by the Thai Prime Minister, Chavalit Yongchaiyudh. The purpose of 
the visit was defined as establishing a firm strategic alliance with "Greater China." The Thai leadership was 
said to have "recognized China as a superpower that has a global role," and as wishing to serve as "a bridge 
between China and ASEAN." Singapore has gone even farther in stressing ils idcnlilicalion with China. 
Ultimately, the probability of either scenario sketched out on the maps fully coming to pass depends not only 
on how China itself develops but also very much on American conduct and presence. A disengaged America 
would make the second scenario much more likely, but even the comprehensive emergence of the first would 
require some American accommodation and self-restraint. The Chinese know this, and hence Chinese policy 
has to be focused primarily on influencing both American conduct and, especially, the critical American-
Japanese connection, with China's other relationships manipulated tactically with that strategic concern in mind. 
China's principal objection to America relates less to what America actually does than to what America 
currently is and where it is. America is seen by China as the world's current hege-mon, whose very presence in 
the region, based on its dominant position in Japan, works to contain China's influence. In the words of a 


Chinese analyst employed in the research arm of the Chinese Foreign Ministry: "The U.S. strategic aim is to 
seek hegemony in the whole world and it cannot tolerate the appearance of any big power on the European and 
Asian continents that will constitute a threat to its leading position."5 Hence, simply by being what it is and 
where it is, America becomes China's unintentional adversary rather than its natural ally. 

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