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Xi's China rising, Trump's America waning

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Xi's China rising, Trump's America waning

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US President Donald Trump takes part in a welcoming ceremony with China's President Xi Jinping on November 9 in Beijing, China

In less than a year in office, US President Donald Trump has managed to alienate more allies and provoke more enemies faster and more decisively than any of his predecessors in recent history. All of a sudden, we face the simultaneous threats of war from the Korean Peninsula to the Middle East.

Meanwhile, US' chief rival, China, has steadily expanded its influence across the Asia-Pacific region and beyond, wooing both the East and the West with an enticing package of economic mega-initiatives, which seek to transform the world in Beijing's image.

While Trump is picking fights with new and old adversaries, China is steadily expanding its spheres of influence. Day by day, it's becoming increasingly clear that the world is on the cusp of a post-American order, if not a new era of Chinese hegemony. And neither outcome is necessarily a cause for celebration.

China's soft power coup
From Europe to Asia, friends and allies of the US have been watching Trump's tempestuous presidency in dread.

His midnight rants on Twitter, incoherent policy on major geopolitical flashpoints, penchant for firing senior advisers, apparent Islamophobia, and constant berating of free trade and the broader international liberal order have dramatically undermined confidence in US global leadership. And controversial decisions by his administration have been increasingly alienating US allies.

According to one survey covering 37 nations in five continents, confidence in the US presidency doing the right thing for the international community has virtually collapsed; as many as 74 percent of respondents expressed little to zero confidence in Trump's global leadership acumen.

In major allied nations such as Japan and South Korea, 78 and 88 percent of respondents said they had confidence in Barack Obama in the last year of his presidency; for Trump, these numbers are now respectively 24 and 17 percent.

The emergence of China as a new pillar of the international order isn't necessarily a cause for celebration.


Washington's fickleness has eased in Beijing's charm offensive. China has courted even some of US' closest allies such as the Philippines.

And surveys show that a growing number of people, including in the Philippines, support their country's pivot to China amid doubts over American wherewithal and commitment.

With the Trump administration's aggressive rhetoric escalating over the past year, China has adopted a much more balanced and diplomatic stance on the world politics stage. Beijing has opposed Trump's suggestions of decertifying the Iranian nuclear deal and his belligerent statements on North Korea. China has also openly rejected Trump's decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel by emphasising the necessity for a two-state solution, where East Jerusalem becomes the capital of Palestine.

If the White House continues down the foreign policy path it has adopted in the first year of Trump's presidency, China will have a much easier time presenting itself as a non-interventionist superpower, which favours peaceful solutions to intractable conflicts, and perhaps even as a global arbiter.

China: The new champion of free trade
In a bizarre twist of events, Trump (a billionaire and former real estate magnate) has also become the new voice of economic protectionism and a chief critic of economic globalisation.

Throughout his international visits, including in Asia, he has called for "fair" trade and bilateral trade agreements, directly challenging the US century-old commitment to the global liberal order.

In response, the most powerful allies of the US, including Japan, Australia and Europe, have pushed ahead with alternative trade arrangements which directly bypass Washington.

In stark contrast to Trump's rhetoric, communist China has presented itself as the new vanguard of the international economic order.

The American bully may be on its way to permanent decline, but its likely successor is far from reassuring.


During his speech at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Vietnam in November, Chinese President Xi Jinping called for "more open, more balanced, more equitable and more beneficial" global trading arrangements, praised proposed and existing "multilateral trading regime" and underlined the necessity for "practice[ing] open regionalism."

While Trump unilaterally nixed the US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, China supported alternative trading arrangements such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement, which covers 16 nations across the Asia-Pacific region.

China has doubled down on its economic influence by launching the trillion-dollar One Belt One Road Initiative earlier this year, a mega-project that aims to connect Asia to Europe and Africa via a new network of Beijing-funded roads, railroads and shipping lanes. The message is clear: Where the US offers criticism and threats, China offers investments and hope.

Will China be a better hegemon than the US?
The emergence of China as a new pillar of the international order isn't necessarily a cause for celebration.

For a reality check, one must take a sober look at Beijing's limited respect for human rights and democracy, support for oppressive and dangerous regimes, mixed record on the success of its investments across the developing world, territorial assertiveness and direct challenge to international norms and laws, as well as increasing interference in the affairs of smaller nations.

From Asia to Africa and Latin America, a growing number of developing countries have found themselves drowning in unsustainable debt, thanks to white elephants built by Chinese infrastructure companies.


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Unable to settle their debt and optimise mal-designed infrastructure projects, poor nations have been forced to grant Beijing full stake in their critical infrastructure and resources such as seaports (Sri Lanka), major public land (Laos), and natural resources (Venezuela).

China hasn't behaved as belligerently as the US (yet), but there are enough reasons to cast doubt on the long-term designs of the Asian powerhouse in the developing world.

The American bully may be on its way to permanent decline, but its likely successor is far from reassuring.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

COUNTING THE COST
 
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It's just the natural order of things. Due to the dissemination of technology, it has now come within the reach of every country out there.

America's exponential decline (as saw with them crying and threatening the entire world in the UN a few days ago) was inevitable, Trump is just speeding up the process.

China is just a symptom. In fact, America's relative power has been declining relative to the ENTIRE world, not just the developing world, but even developed countries and supposed US allies like UK/France/Germany/Japan have laughed in America's face in the UN like they were a joke.

See Trump's class, that we was openly slinging mud against the UK Prime minister and the German Prime minister, both of whom were women, which given Trump's track record is hardly surprising.

Trump runs America like a shitty reality TV show, if he thought that goading North Korea into nuking several American cities would give him more "ratings" and get more people to talk about "Trump" then he would do it. Since him and his family will be safe in nuclear fallout shelters.

And that doesn't just apply to Trump, but the entire American political class.
 
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After all, the dollar is dead, right? Yuan rules the world! :D

Why does this type of topic get repeated 15 times a week? Any idea @Hamartia Antidote ? We get it. USA is no longer. Sniff!

All hail China. Congratulations.
 
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After all, the dollar is dead, right? Yuan rules the world! :D

Why does this type of topic get repeated 15 times a week? Any idea @Hamartia Antidote ? We get it. USA is no longer. Sniff!

All hail China. Congratulations.

China is not a replacement for America, it never was.

China's rise is just the most obvious symptom of America's decline, which is why we are getting so much attention.

But it's like trying to treat cancer by treating the symptoms, you are not fixing the root cause. And the root cause is the complete and utter rot and decay of the American political class, to the point where no one really knows what is "fake news" and whether someone "grabbed them by the p*ssy" or not.

To the point where US spent all the political capital they could in the Jerusalem vote, but even their supposed allies (UK/France/Germany/Japan) laughed in their faces and directly voted against them. Despite constant threats from the White House, no one changed their minds. Not even Egypt and Iraq.
 
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After all, the dollar is dead, right? Yuan rules the world! :D

Why does this type of topic get repeated 15 times a week? Any idea @Hamartia Antidote ? We get it. USA is no longer. Sniff!

All hail China. Congratulations.

Sir ji, Bachay khush ho rahay hain, dil tu na tora karo. we tend to get emotional very fast and loose touch with ground realities. China is Progressing well but where USA stands, its global reach and influence and what clout/danda USA has...so far no other country is half way around.

ye hamari khwahishat aur ummedain hain, kabi tu pori ho gi. Insha Allah
 
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And the root cause is the complete and utter rot and decay of the American political class,


One could argue that, even in such a state of "complete and utter rot", the US political class and the system under which it operates is still better than any other out there, including the Chinese CCCP.

Sir ji, Bachay khush ho rahay hain, dil tu na tora karo. we tend to get emotional very fast and loose touch with ground realities. China is Progressing well but where USA stands, its global reach and influence and what clout/danda USA has...so far no other country is half way around.

ye hamari khwahishat aur ummedain hain, kabi tu pori ho gi. Insha Allah

Pray all you want, but the results come from hard work. Here, those lazy Murrikans are not all that lazy as portrayed. :D

But USA's decline is inevitable. China is on the rise.

Thanks God for that.


God sides with those who work the hardest. Always remember that, please.
 
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Pray all you want, but the results come from hard work. Here, those lazy Murrikans are not all that lazy as portrayed. :D
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Agree, Americans are working hard to pursue and achieve their goals and on the other hand we are trying to get ready to work. Hopefully we will wake up before its too late.

Also agree with, "God sides with those who work the hardest. Always remember that, please."
 
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but where USA stands, its global reach and influence and what clout/danda USA has...so far no other country is half way around.

The US has such influence because it made jackas.s of a lot of countries by luring them, and then imposing a fake jewish financial system on them. It is not US's fault, but entirely the fault of retar.ds who fell for this deception.
 
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The US has such influence because it made jackas.s of a lot of countries by luring them, and then imposing a fake jewish financial system on them. It is not US's fault, but entirely the fault of retar.ds who fell for this deception.

Exactly, this is the reality. Blame game and being defensive is OK but we must know and accept the truth, then only we can counter it effectively.
Thanks.
 
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But USA's decline is inevitable. China is on the rise.

Thanks God for that.

What is exactly declining again? Sure, the world hates Trump, but he's temporary. The US can easily regain its influence among its allies under a new presidency. Meanwhile, the US economy is outperforming most of the world, including China. We remain at the forefront of science and technology, and our cultural influence remains unparalleled.

It's become obvious that certain members of this forum use these types of threads to peddle their anti-American hate, envy, and spitefulness.
 
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What is exactly declining again? Sure, the world hates Trump, but he's temporary. The US can easily regain its influence among its allies under a new presidency. Meanwhile, the US economy is outperforming most of the world, including China. We remain at the forefront of science and technology, and our cultural influence remains unparalleled.

It's become obvious that certain members of this forum use these types of threads to peddle their anti-American hate, envy, and spitefulness.
What goes up must come down, it happened to China and it's happening to US, it's very natural in the history.
 
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