![]() |
But underpinning the conflict ― which looks to be of uncertain escalation and duration ― lies a more consequential struggle over ideology and global security. It pits the world's leading free economy against the leading example of state-directed capitalism; the world's leading liberal democracy against its last major communist-ruled state.
In fact, a host of bilateral disputes has been simmering in the five years since China's strongman leader Xi Jinping came to power.
Under Xi, China has moved away from Deng Xiaoping's "low-key" diplomacy and embraced a high-profile and increasingly assertive diplomatic and defense policy, in an effort to compete for global leadership.
That was why former U.S. President Barack Obama, in his second term, reshaped U.S. policy with his "pivot to Asia" and the now abandoned Trans-Pacific Partnership, as two main tools to contain what America sees as China's wild rise.
For years since Richard Nixon's overture, the U.S.-China relationship has been built on the pursuit of shared interests and a belief that an engagement policy would inevitably help China evolve, as a result of its embrace of global capitalism and the consequent greater interaction with the international community. Relations were also built on the confidence that China's rising power would be moderated by perpetual American superiority and primacy in many areas.
However, the U.S., and others in the West, are getting increasingly uneasy about China's political development and the nature of Chinese influence abroad. Ideology once again defines the terms of the U.S.-China relationship.
Washington sees China's recent developments as a major political setback in the one-party authoritarian state, as Beijing began to embrace some elements of orthodox Leninist-Stalinist philosophy and Maoist politics. This is seen in its intensified crackdown on dissent, its suppression of freedom, more draconian censorship on the internet and social media, and tighter social control in recent years.
Externally, China is challenging an established global order of governance built on the Bretton Woods institutions and led by the U.S. For instance, Xi's brainchild, the "Belt and Road Initiative," will build a China-centered communication and trade network that will connect China by infrastructural links to more than 65 percent of the world's population.
Beijing has also become increasingly assertive in its foreign and defense policy, whether on Taiwan or territorial and maritime disputes with its neighbors. Xi has called on China to become a nation of global influence by 2050.
China is also promoting its development model as a substitute to the Western model. With its success in lifting masses of people out of poverty faster than any other society in history, the Chinese development model is being touted as a new option for other countries.
To be sure, China is a long way from overtaking the U.S. economically, militarily, diplomatically and politically, in view of U.S. superiority and primacy in the areas of science, technology, education, culture and soft power.
But China's recent developments have convinced policymakers in Washington that they are witnessing the revival of a new Soviet empire in the cold-war era, which should be contained before it is too late. Joseph Nye, the Harvard Kennedy School political scientist who coined the term "soft power," has begun to describe Chinese global influence as "sharp power," and says "we must resist it."
Kurt Campbell, Obama's top China expert, in a lengthy paper he co-authored titled "The China Reckoning," concluded that America's nearly half a century of China policy since Nixon has failed.
For these reasons, President Donald Trump recently redefined Washington's China policy to label the Middle Kingdom a strategic rival, which, like a rogue regime or terrorist organ, seeks to undermine the "U.S. economy, interests and values."
Thus, the ongoing trade dispute is just one episode in a long-running contest between the world's key economic rivals and political adversaries, in a seemingly new cold-war era.
Cary Huang, a senior writer with the South China Morning Post, has been a senior editor and veteran China affairs columnist since the early 1990s. Copyright belongs to the South China Morning Post.