Saturday, October 9, 2010

China as a rising power

Here in Singapore, the media (especially the Chinese language one) is basically very pro-government when it comes to covering news from China. In fact, listening to Mediacorp Capital Radio 95.8 FM's coverage of the recent Sino-Japanese diplomatic altercation gave me the impression that I was listening to the CCP Propaganda Department's press releases. Thankfully, Mediacorp's English language stations were slightly more balanced in their coverage.

Besides this, it appears to me that most Chinese Singaporeans accept the rise of China as a regional and potentially global power as an unalloyed positive thing, perhaps due to our cultural affinity and identification with our forefathers' homeland. Perhaps this is due to our failure to differentiate between China as a country and the Chinese Communist Party as a political power ruling the country.

In any case, the view of China even amongst our ASEAN allies is somewhat less sanguine than ours. Without the blinkers of cultural affinity, they are more likely to see objectively the threats that the CCP pose to regional security and stability, as evidenced by Vietnam building closer ties with the United States recently.

As such for alternative perspectives on China, I would like to share the following articles and blog posts:




Perhaps it may also be useful to know that while the CCP has played hardball with the Japanese over the issue of China's 'territorial integrity', much to the pride of ethnic Chinese people everywhere, it had not advertised the fact that it had signed a treaty with Russia to renounce claims to 1.6 million square kilometres of land that once belonged to China up to the Qing Dynasty. Somewhat duplicitous, don't you think?

As Singaporeans, we would be well-served to remain prepared and vigilant about regional developments, and not to take regional stability for granted during this period of waning Western power and rising Chinese hegemony.

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