AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

What Hillary Didn't Do In Asia.(International Edition; POINT OF VIEW)(Hillary Clinton's strategy for United States and Asia relations)

Newsweek International

| March 09, 2009 | Mahbubani, Kishore | COPYRIGHT 2009 Newsweek, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reuse, distribution or alteration without express written permission of Newsweek is prohibited. For permission: www.newsweek.com. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Clinton made no mistakes on her China trip. Yet there's no evidence of serious strategic thinking either.

Why did Hillary Clinton lose the race for the democratic presidential nomination? Simple. She had a plan A: to romp through initial primaries, build momentum and squash her opponents. But when plan A failed, she found she had no backup. Even though she successfully scrambled and managed to slow Obama's momentum, the battle was already lost. Clinton failed to engage in strategic thinking in the biggest competition of her life, and it cost her.

All this made her a curious choice to become secretary of state. Clinton is intelligent, tough, shrewd and, when she chooses to be, charming. But the key to doing her new job well is to engage in long-term strategic thinking on major geopolitical challenges --such as the U.S. role in managing the rise of Asia.

Her recent trip to the region provides some early clues on how she'll manage this task. There's no doubt she did a competent job. Clinton followed the advice of her briefing books, making Japan her first stop to reassure this nervous and insecure ally. Then she went to Indonesia, probably at Obama's instigation, to rebuild America's image in the world's most populous Islamic country. South Korea was an essential stop to send the usual tough signals to North Korea. And then came China, her most important destination.

Throughout it all, the secretary made no mistakes. She said and did the right things and made pleasant noises to please each host. In China, for example, she said, "We have to look inward for solutions, but we must also look to each other to take a leadership role in designing and implementing a coordinated global response to stabilize the world's economy and begin recovery." This appeal to cooperation in sharing leadership must have pleased her hosts, as it showed great respect--a big issue for China.

Yet there's little evidence Clinton has engaged in any serious strategic thinking about U.S.-China relations. If she had, she would have asked some big questions. Traditionally, relations between dominant powers and emerging powers have been tense. This should have been the norm with China and the United States. Yet China has emerged without alarming Americans. That's close to a geopolitical miracle. Who deserves credit for it? Beijing or Washington? China seems to have a clear, comprehensive strategy. The United States has none.

Beijing's strategy toward the United States is complex. Chinese leaders have consistently followed Deng Xiaoping's advice of shanyu shouzhuo--be good at keeping a low profile. Yet they have also created a balanced interdependence with the United States, reducing Washington's ability to ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
China's challenge to the United States and to the earth.
Magazine article from: World Watch Brown, Lester R. Flavin, Christopher September 1, 1996 700+ words
...produces more steel than the United States. Since China has 4.6 times as many...price. Grain Harvest: China The United States, long the world's leading...only 20 million tons in the United States. China's pork consumption of...
Sen. Cantwell Introduces United States-China Market Engagement and Export...
News wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News August 12, 2009 700+ words
...Washington, has introduced the United States-China Market Engagement and Export...the legislation follows: United States-China Market Engagement and Export...Act may be cited as the `United States-China Market Engagement and Export...
Comparison of nursing: China and the United States.(Report)
Magazine article from: Nursing Economics Kalisch, Beatrice J. Liu, Yilan September 1, 2009 700+ words
...in China and 12.4% in United States. China is different from the United...by health insurance in the United States than China. In China in 2003, 70...1,000 population in the United States and China. As can be seen, there...
Africa: the United States and China court the continent.(Report)
Magazine article from: Journal of International Affairs Shinn, David H. March 22, 2009 700+ words
The United States and China are the two most important bilateral...Nations. The interests of the United States and China in Africa are more similar than...issues should pose a problem for United States-China interaction in Africa. President...
Long-term economic impact of countervailing duties on coated free sheet paper...
Magazine article from: Forest Products Journal Zhu, Shushuai Turner, James A. Buongiorno, Joseph October 1, 2008 700+ words
...CFS) paper to the United States, with exports of...tons (Table 1). China was second with...government subsidies in China, Indonesia, and...Corporation, a United States producer of CFS...reducing exports from China, Korea, and Indonesia to the United States, and ...
Wayne Bert. The United States, China and Southeast Asian Security: A Changing...
Magazine article from: China Review International Van Wie Davis, Elizabeth September 22, 2004 700+ words
Wayne Bert. The United States, China and Southeast Asian Security...the issues confronting the United States and China in Southeast Asia but also...important is that both the United States and China come from a tradition of imperial...
Not in our country? A critique of the United States welfare system through the...
Magazine article from: Columbia Journal of Gender and Law Love, Christie N. June 22, 2005 700+ words
...manner in which the United States has dealt with China in the context of human...is enlightening. The United States has criticized China's one-child law...vigor with which the United States criticizes China's policy should not...
The Curse of the Shanghai Communique.(United States relations with China)(Brief...
Magazine article from: Newsweek International Chang, Parris H. March 4, 2002 700+ words
...and committing the United States to the notion of "one China," including Taiwan...democracy and freedom in China and then commit the United States to oppose the right...counterbalance to China, the United States also should explore...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, What Hillary Didn't Do In Asia.(International Edition; POINT OF...

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA