The struggle for primacy in the Western Pacific will not necessarily involve combat; much of what takes place will happen quietly and over the horizon in blank sea space, at a glacial tempo befitting the slow, steady accommodation to superior economic and military power that states have made throughout history. War is far from inevitable even if competition is a given. And if China and the United States manage the coming handoff successfully, Asia, and the world, will be a more secure, prosperous place. What could be more moral than that? Remember: It is realism in the service of the national interest -- whose goal is the avoidance of war -- that has saved lives over the span of history far more than humanitarian interventionism.Original link / source
SCSW is the database offering updated news and information with special focus on South China Sea disputes and strategic currents.
2011年9月19日 星期一
201109 The South China Sea is the Future of Couflict (R. Kaplan)
A latest article on South China Sea conflict published in 2011 Sep-Oct issue of Foreign Policy, R. Kaplan argues:
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