When Portugal and Castile set out to sail the Atlantic to skirt the Islamic fence, the main political and economic forces of the world were not European. The most important power of the era, as much for its territory (10 millions square kilometers) as for its population (around one-hundred million inhabitants), as well as for its development in manufacturing and craftsman production, was the Chinese Empire.
The Ming Dynasty in 1368, with the expulsion of the Mongols, was able to achieve political unification and the centralization of power. China was the main military force in the world. Its war marina was made up of one-thousand five-hundred ships, and its army added up to a little over one million men. It also bragged the technological vanguard of the era. From this technological development came incredible important inventions, like that compass, gunpowder, paper, the printing press, just to mention the most relevant and well-known ones. Likewise, in matters of infrastructure –roads and canals- China was possibly the most developed region in the world. It also underwent intense commercial traffic – of very considerable dimensions - with the Indonesia, Philippines and Japan of the time.
Asia held in its bosom – together with China - other important political and economic powers: the Moghul Empire, the Maratha Confederacy – in what is now the territory of India -, the Persian Empire and the Ottoman Empire. India, though it covered a surface area of 3.5 million square kilometers, had a population of eighty million inhabitants and with an industrial development not inferior to China, it found itself disincorporated between the Moghul Empire, the Maratha Confederacy and a hodgepodge group of independent princedoms. The Maratha Confederacy dominated the center of modern-day India. To the south, a multitude of independent princes controlled the Malabar and the Coromandel coasts. Political disintegration made India, despite its enormous economic weight, not is a geostrategic player of any importance.
Persia was the second Islamic power, with close to ten million inhabitants. In 1502, under the Safavid Dynasty – of Shiite creed -, it recorded an extremely important rebirth as much of its political power as in trade, industry, art and architecture. Its strategic position caused it to become a power with possibilities of influencing world events. The Turkish Ottoman Empire – then, the main strategic “threat” of the European Peninsula- was the major Islamic power. With fourteen million inhabitants, it dominated the Balkan Islands, the Black Sea, the eastern Mediterranean, Asia Minor, the Mesopotamian, Northern Africa and the Red Sea. [1]
The center of world power was, unarguably, in Asia, Nevertheless, with the ocean voyages of discovery that western European sailors carried out five centuries ago, the transformation of the geopolitical map of the world began. Thus the center of world power gave a sudden leap. It jumped, from the heart of the Chinese Empire, to the Iberian Peninsula and later to flutter over Seville and Lisbon, and then for a time over to Isabel’s England to finally skip over the Atlantic and plant itself in North America, where the elite leadership, descendants of the “founding fathers”, built the first continental industrial State-nation in history, raising, as had England in its time, once again, the threshold of power.
From the beginning of the first period of globalization – starring the great Portuguese, Italian and Spanish sailors -, power abandoned Asia.
Nowadays, however, as Arnold Toynbee warned early on:
We are going into a new age, in which the physical means of human traffic will no longer be the steppe nor the ocean but rather the air, and in an aerial age humanity can reach, by flapping its wings, the liberation of its juvenile bonds to the capricious configuration of the surface –solid and liquid- of the globe. In an aerial age, the central position of gravity of human affairs can be determined by human geography and not the physical one; not by the disposition of the oceans and sea, steppes and deserts, rivers and mountain ranges, passes and narrow passages, but rather by the distribution of mass, energy, ability, knowledge and human character. And, amongst these human factors, the gravitation of mass may eventually become great than its influence in the past. (Toynbee, 1967: 73)
Thus, it is possible to state that power hovers, once again, over Asia though it still has not “alighted” on any specific nation.
China, a New Actor that Aspires to Stardom
The intervention of the United States in the Second World War –though done belatedly so that the setback would allow the definite strategic weakening of the British Empire- was decisive to defeat the attempt of the most anti-human and sinister world domination of modern times. Humanity owes the United States – and Russia - for the defeat of the Nazi barbarity.
Nevertheless, the victory of the United States over the powers of the Axis did not lead it, in and of itself, to become the only hegemonic world power, as the American ruling elite had planned, and believed, as far back as the times of war against Spain.[2]
And it is true that, for forty years, the “soviet counter power” hindered the hegemonic configuration but, from the implosion of the Soviet Union on, the United States recuperated “global primacy” and it was once again left open to North American power the possibility of unilaterally organizing the international system in its different aspects, in such a way that its own interests, in any order, would be assured and would be maintained in time. However, this possibility today depends on – according to Brzezinski’s perspective - not only on the power that the United States has accumulated but also on how it “plays” on the Euro-Asian game board.
According to Brzezinski, since Eurasia is and has been the center of world power –since the time the continents have been able to interact in the terrain of politics, for around five-hundred years, to hinder the emergence of a Eurasian power, dominant and antagonistic, for the United States it is a “fundamental objective” in terms of its capacity to exercise global primacy: “The foreign policy of the United States should continue to dealing with the geopolitical dimension and employ its influence in Eurasia to create a stable continental balance in which the United States would exercise the function of political referee. Eurasia is, well, the game board in which the struggle for global primacy continues being played, and that struggle involves geo-strategy: strategic arrangement of political interests” (Brezinski, 1998: 12). Because of that, he concludes, “it is essential that there not be an emergence of any aspirant to Eurasian power capable of dominating Eurasia and, furthermore, also capable of challenging the United States” (12).
In the analysis made by the majority of the American ruling elite, that “aspirant State” and which, according to Brzezinski’s logic, would have to be neutralized before it finished completely developing its national power- is the People’s Republic of China. In Brzezinski’s thesis, the global primacy of the United States “depends directly on how long, and how effectively, they can maintain their preponderance in the Eurasian continent” (Brzezninski, 1998: 39).
Nationalism & Globalization in China
The extraordinary consistent growth of Chinese domestic gross product, the opening of its economy to foreign investments, the spectacular modernization of its productive apparatus and the impacting outbreak of its industrial production into the world markets clouds the fact that China dives into globalization in outright nationalistic effervescence. This is the politically central fact that should be kept in mind for any serious analysis of the future of this country. Chinese leadership has a historical imperial vocation and has lived through the last five-hundred years of Western predominance as a “deep humiliation”. [3]
In order to comprehend Chinese nationalism and the “feeling of humiliation” –that feeds it to a large extent- it is not enough to retract to the Opium War but rather it is better to remember that five-hundred years ago, when continents began to interact, the Chinese Empire – despite possessing all the required material conditions - was not the main player of the first stage of globalization due solely to an irreversible strategic error made by the Ming dynasty.
As we have already affirmed, globalization starts when the Latino-Germanic world, venturing out into the immense Atlantic Ocean, overcomes the enclosure to which it had been submitted by the Islamic-Ottoman world in the so called “Middle Ages”, from the 7th century on. Until that historic moment, all the small Christian kingdoms of the European peninsula were much farther behind the Chinese Empire and they possessed, before it, an outright scientific and cultural deficit:
The European culture, less developed (in comparison with the Islamic, Hindustani, and especially the Chinese culture), separated by the Ottoman-Islamic “wall” of the central regions of the Asian-AfroMediterranean continent was, then, until the end of the 15th century, peripheral. (Dussel, 2004: 19)
Seventy years before Columbus landed on America, the Chinese Imperial fleet had already carried out numerous trans-oceanic trips with one of the possibly reaching as far as the American continent. Admiral Zheng He, a Muslim Eunuch, installed a large school of oceanic navigation and built the biggest naval squadron in history for the Chinese Emperor.
Zheng made, at least, seven incredible voyages, between 1405 and 1423, around the southern Pacific, the Indian Ocean, the Persian Gulf and the coasts of Africa. With his expeditions he opened the doors of the empire to other cultural realities and also to other commercial possibilities. On March 5th of 1421 he set sail from the Nanking port to make his seventh trip with a fleet composed of six-hundred junks and thirty-thousand crew members. These expeditions were commercial and scientific, and the squads mapped Africa and Asia, being it highly probable that they circumnavigated, for the first time, the entire globe and, thus, discovered America. On the return trip from that seventh voyage, an erroneous geo-political Chinese decision made that new knowledge never turn into a conquest. In 1424, the Emperor – convinced by the members of the court that the Admiral’s trips took away more than they brought back to the imperial coffers - decided to suspend the naval expeditions.
The kingdoms of Portugal and Castile –to which the maps created by the Chinese squadron possibly might have reached -, far less developed than the Chinese Empire, threw themselves into the Atlantic and undertook the great voyages of discovery, thus usufructing the “strategic mistake” made by Chinese power.
The Ming Emperor, in 1424, decided to abandon the naval expeditions, and thus, the indisputable dominion of all the oceans, the discovery and the conquest of new lands. The Chinese decision of abandoning the naval expeditions left, in a sense, an emptiness of power that was filled by Europe.
To our understanding, this is the motive for which – according to the very same “reading of history” - China believes it was destined to create a universal empire and that that vocation was snatched away from it by the “barbaric” peoples of the tiny European peninsula.
Brzezinski:
The intense current nationalism of the Chinese people is new only as far as its social penetration, seeing as how in it intervene self-identification and the emotions of an unprecedented number of Chinese. Chinese nationalism is done being a phenomenon primarily confined to students that, in the early years of this century, were the precursors of the Kuomintang and of the Chinese Nationalist Party. Chinese nationalism is, currently, a phenomenon of the masses that defines the mentality of the most populated State in the world. That mentality has deep historical roots. History has predisposed the Chinese elite to think that China is the natural center of the world. In fact, the word “China” in Chinese – Zhong-guo, or “middle kingdom”- transmits the idea of the centrality of China in world matters and, at the same time, it reaffirms the importance of national unity. (Brzezinski, 1998: 163)
As a consequence, if China is able to neutralize the terrible exogenous forces –that desire its internal fragmentation- maintain its social stability and its accelerated rate of development during the next three decades, it will then reach the conditions that Helio Jaguaribe denominates “equipollence” with the United States. The success of Chinese development –plus the possible partial recuperation of Russian power, that would begin with Vladimir Putin, and to the adoption of a foreign policy and a policy of self-defense on behalf of the hard nucleus (Germany and France) of the European Union- could cause a “multi-polar world order” to prevail mi-century, a circumstance that would increase the international margin of labor and national autonomy of South American countries.
The Challenges that Come from the Far East
And now, independently from the fact that China could become a high technology and knowledge producing power – a condition sine qua non for it to reach a relationship of “equipollence” with American power- there are few doubts as to whether or not it is a real possibility that around 2030 the Asian country would be in a position to become a great industrial power, with real capacities for providing, with their manufactured products, for the entire world.
Once China transforms into the “world’s big factory”, it will also become – as already happens, in a certain way, presently -, a “giant vacuum of raw materials”, consequently provoking a substantial elevation of their international prices. This fact, that already favors the primary South American economies, will tend to become more and more obvious. A new golden wave will then come about for the exportation of primary products, an era into which, maybe, we have already entered.
The adding into the realm of universal commerce of a new and voracious demander of raw materials (to which we must add the growing demand of India) – whose presence can already clearly be “palpated” at present, through the simple statistical survey of the amazing increases in value of commodities in recent years- it will generate a new pressure, added to those already in existence, that could paradoxically influence in a highly negative way in the possibilities of autonomous development of the South American region.
It is that, encouraged by the growing values of their extractive products, the temptation to go back to pre-industrial diagrams – especially in Argentina and, though in less measure, also in Brazil - could become more and more intense. Furthermore, it would encourage – and even worse, “it would justify” - the position of those local elite that consider plans for autonomous industrial development “unnecessary” and even “forced”. This goes without mentioning those South American countries whose economies continue depending on pre-industrial plans, in which, directly, the future would make it unpractical to make any attempt to industrialize or technologize autonomously. To the mental pressure for, and consequent temptation of, deindustrializing we must add, as a compliment or natural corollary, the disproportionate global “offer” of manufactured goods – from low, midrange and high technology- that with the irruption of a “salesmen” China (and probably also of India) they will end up lowering the prices of these manufactured goods to probably despicable levels.
The existence of a new “buyer” of raw materials has, as a logical counterpart, the apparition of a new ”seller” of manufactured goods, and the competition and overabundance of the latter will end up exponentially multiplying international pressure to maintain the totality of South America as a “natural market” and, thus, obtain “unrestricted openness” of the economies of South American nations. Such an overabundance of manufacture good in the global market – of which the scale of production that China can reach will be in large part be responsible- will tend to make the price of any manufactured industrial product made far away from our region infinitely inferior to the cost of any manufactured industrial product in South America.
We will have to add the destructive effect of possible surpluses of global industrial production to the disproportionate supply. Given the enormous scale of production that China’s economy is capable of reaching –and India’s as well- between 2020 and 2050, it is highly probable that these economies generate enormous surpluses of production to such point that, indiscriminately dumped into the international market, they would be sold at despicable prices, even under that of their costs, for it will be more valuable to these new economies to poorly sell their produced goods before halting their growth. The commercial dispute with other already industrialized nations for specific markets will be capable of making South America one of the main “ducks at the wedding” of this global dispute for consumption markets.
This situation would clearly be capable of annihilating local production and, due to not being neatly and completely foreseen and neutralized by an intelligently protective policy, consented to, common and univocal, it would condemn all of South America to an excluding specialization and it would return the nations of the region to the condition of mere providers of raw material and non-manufactured agricultural products.
Footnotes:
1. The numbers on the population, surface area, industrial production and effectives of the armies used here are taken from the brilliant work of Aldo Ferrer (2001b: 19-28).
2. From the beginning of the First World War, the American ruling elite came up with the idea that the United States should support English power to eliminate to only real competitor that was German industrial power, to become in that way the main hegemonic power in the world. One of the men of the elite who most clearly expressed the North American hegemonic project from the time of the war with Spain was Theodor Roosevelt. But the American ruling elite knew that the execution of that geopolitical plan would not be bearable to the people, imbued with deep democratic ideals. Thus, Woodrow Wilson will translate, into a more easily assimilated way –by wrapping it in an idealistic format- for the American people, the hegemonic geopolitical project that had been expressed brutally by Roosevelt. As the American historian Immanuel Wallerstein states (quoted by MetholFerre, 2001: 30), the fundamental fact of the first half of the 20th century is the Anglo-Saxon alliance, that destroys German industrial power, which was the heart of Europe. That act settled the question of the century that later became the competition of two State continents, the Soviet Union on one hand and the United States on the other. And that new competition just barely went to sleep in 1989.
3. All of China’s story has predisposed its ruling elite to think that their nation is the natural center of the world: “That perspective also implies the existence of a hierarchic system of radially ordered influence that goes from the center to the periphery, and thus China, as the center, expects to be treated with difference by others. […] From that lens, the loss of China’s grandiose –the last one-hundred and fifty years of humiliation is an aberration, a profanation of the special Chinese condition and a personal insult to each Chinese- should be erased and its perpetrators deserve to be punished” (Brzezinski, 1998: 163-164).
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