Professor John J. Mearsheimer, the provocative author of offensive realism, has just published apolicy essay on US-China relations in Foreign Affairs as the November/December 2021 cover article. In it, he legitimizes and naturalizes the current strategic standoff between the two countries with his theory. The title of his essay “The Inevitable Rivalry: America, China, and the Tragedy of Great-Power Politics” resonates fully with the title of Graham Allison’s book Destined for War and Samuel Huntington’s book Clash of Civilization. Like its predecessors or siblings, this theory primes big powers such as the US in its effort to counter the emergence of its rivals and in its pursuit for sustained dominance around the world of “anarchy” in the 21st century.
Dangerous Collusion
Offensive realism, bordering on a militant and military theory, brings readers from the world of human civilization back into the lawless jungle roamed by animals and beasts where the adage that “Might is right” and the principle of the survival of the fittest prevail. In the author’s mind, the international society made up of nation-states, in extension the human society, is no more civilized than the animal world. Thus, it is natural, inevitable, and thus imperative for nation-states to attack and conquer their rivals with all available means and resources to secure a zero-sum result regardless of laws, norms, and regulations about international relationsoverseen by international bodies such as UN.
The timing of the publication of the essay at the current juncture when the rivalry between US-China is intensifying seems to be the result of a strategic calculation and choice by the editorial board of Foreign Affairs. Its main purpose seems to legitimize and embolden the Trump-Biden foreign policy of containment towards China when this policy has been recently under growing criticism both at home and abroad. Though it is wrapped in offensive realism, an off shoot of the realist school of thought in IR theory, Mearsheimer’s theory of great power politics resonates well with Graham Allison’s Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’ Trap and Samuel Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations and the Making of World Order. The only difference is that Mearsheimer’s theory of great-power politics and offensive realism applied to US-China rivalry is sharper and more operationalizable among the three as it literally and nakedly advocates for the status quo superpower to use all available means, be it hard such as conventional weapons and unconventional weapons such as the nuclear weapons or soft and covert such as coercion and disinformation, to slow down or destroy the economy of the rising power such as China with little regard to basic human decency, humane values, ethics and sense of justice. It is the most naked, the bloodiest, and animalistic “theory” crafted and trumpeted consistently and constantly by Professor Mearsheimer, a tenured full professor in the title of R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science in University of Chicago. In his theorizing and policy suasion, the author strips all values and norms of basic human civilization which regulate human behavior and does not at all take the possible disastrous consequences of this US-China war (be it cold or hot) to all the parties, the US, China and the rest of Asia and the rest of the world into consideration.
Mearsheimer’s theory feeds right into the unsatiable lust for gold and egoistic ambitions for maintaining global dominance on the part of the military-industrial complex and neoconservatives of the US against any emerging rivals such as China. Contrary to Joseph Nye’s warning in his recent Syndicate commentary against both the US and China to prevent from sleepwalking into a hot war, Mearsheimer is saying that such a war is ultimately inevitable and rivaling parties should be proactive for such a war. If this is not warmongering, what is it then?! Mearsheimer would not be afraid of a hot war or a nuclear war between the US and China probably because he would not participate in such a war in person and his relatives might not participate in it, either. Plus, he lives in the Midwest of the US and would not be hit by a nuclear warhead which most probably would hit the West Coast or the East Coast on condition that a nuclear war broke out between the US and Chinawith his provocative theory and advice. In fact, he would be excited that his theory would be proved correct again with a new outbreak of the war between the US and China.
I guess that the proposal of forming a new concert of powers by the President of the Council of Foreign Relations, Richard N. Haas, which was published in March 2021, must have been frowned upon by the all-powerful special interest group-the military-industrial complex of the US which has been hijacking the US democracy for long. As the CFR President who oversees its flagship publication Foreign Affairs, Mr. Haas might have beenpressed to solicit and present a more militant proposal backed up by the infamous IR theory, offensive realism, to legitimize and bolster the US’ offensive military strategy towards China.
A Recipe for Disasters
Nothing is inevitable in human affairs. But Mearsheimer’s inevitablistic reasoning masks and discounts human agency in preventing war and creating peace and rhetorically naturalizes rivalry (be it in the form of cold war or hot war including nuclear war) among great powers. Called as offensive realism, it is a mere scholarly way for the author to advocate such rivalry as the law of the jungle. Nation-states are the designs of groups of educated elites. If a given design such as nation-state tends to cause rivalry or war, then the elites should and can revise the design to minimize or prevent it from happening. That is what FDR did when he spearheaded the founding of UN 76 years ago. After all, in today’s world, war means a disaster for all. That is why all the US presidents who forged the engagement strategy with China, from Nixon to Obama, pursued engagement as a majorpolicy in dealing with China. It has passed the test of time as a mutually beneficial policy. However, Mearsheimer paints all these great American statemen with their groups of advisors and American businesses as “stupid” and asleep while implying he, together with Trump and his likes, is singularly awake and smart.
Inheriting, expanding, and deepening this engagement paradigm, China has been championing for a new type of great power relationship to the US which is characterized by the three principles of no rivalry, no confrontation, and mutual benefit through dialogue and collaborations for more than 11 years since its inception. That is also why the grand vision of the community of mankind for a shared future has been articulated and implemented by China for the past 10 years.
Unfortunately, Both Mearsheimer and the leading decision makers of foreign policy in Washington DC remain both deaf and blind to the Chinese proposal for building the community of mankind for a shared future. If they keep remaining a deaf ear and does not remain open to Chinese President Xi’s repeated proposal for the new type of great-power relations fundamentally different from Mearsheimer’s outdated great-power politics rooted in the American colonial, hegemonic, and imperialistic experience during the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century, they may end up paying a hefty price for trumpeting and buying in offensive realism in dealing with China and should solely bear responsibility for the likely disastrous consequences caused by this wrong turn.
Offensive realism smells like a skunk, but it acts like a porcupine. It is born and functions with a porcupine’s deep-rooted sense of insecurity and a tunnel vision. Indeed, it takes a person with a porcupine’s mentality to both create and accept this type of theory. It would also benefit the special interest of the military-industrial complex. If every nation-state is armed like a porcupine, this special interest group would always be able to keep fattening their wallet. Therefore, this skunk-smelling theory is poisoning the air of the IR field and attempts to dampen all hopes and efforts for a multipolar world order enshrined by the UN Charter only to benefit the few oligarchies. The foreign policies and military strategies generated out of this porcupine type of skunk-smelling IR theory would be reckless in thinking, disastrous in consequences, and most probably suicidal for any aggressor. It is in fact a contemporary mutation of the Western powers’ adages for colonialism and imperialism such as “Might is right” and a reincarnation of the genocide plan of “Manifest Destiny” to legitimize the genocide of Native Americans and bolstering the whim of extending “the moving frontier” to Asia and the rest of the world. The purpose of Professor Mearsheimer’s effort to sell this skunk-stinking theory to the policy circle of US-China relations is perhaps spawning or emboldening a masterplan to decimate the Chinese nation and engineer a new genocide of the Chinese race beyond the North American continent deep into South China Sea and beyond. CFR, self-styled as a non-governmental, non-profit, and public institution, has now accepted offensive realism whole-heartedly, and presented it enthusiastically to the world of foreign policy making as a cover essay of Foreign Affairs as a result of commissioning to Mearsheimer. CFR has misjudged it a new source of fragrance andas a charming offensive when in fact it is a recipe for disaster.
Look at how low both the partiesare going! I urge every educated professional or any person of human decency to reject this IR theory as it is applied to the US-China relations. It smells like a skunk and acts like a porcupine. Do not mistake skunk smells as fragrance. If you do, your judgement may be in trouble.
Jia Wenshan is a professor of communication and global studies at Chapman University. Distinguished Professor and Ph.D Advisor, Shandong University; Dean of the Global Engagement Academy, Shandong University (Weihai).
This commentary is originally published in China Focus on November 11, 2021.
Here is the link to it:
http://www.cnfocus.com/offensive-realism-acts-like-a-porcupine-smells-like-a-skunk/