AFTER countless "dragon rising" conferences and speeches, Australians have grown accustomed to
But the past few weeks have seen something new: the most important shift so far in the 21st century. History in the making.
In August it leapfrogged
During the past few years,
Instead,
These are the waters through which more than half of
In the past few days, the US House of Representatives has voted overwhelmingly for legislation approving sanctions against
Influential
The
Two Chinese thrusts underline the country's role as a great power in
The first move:
The second move involved the ramming by a Chinese trawler of two Japanese gunboats in the oil and gas rich waters near
China retaliated by banning exchanges with Japan, cancelling all cabinet-level contact with Japan, instructing travel agents to stop offering tours to Japan, and suspending negotiations to increase airline flights. "If
A week ago,
This wasn't the end of the affair.
The global financial crisis has triggered a shift in the balance of economic power. And while there is growing debate over how the West can and should respond to
A leading Australian expert on Asia, economist Peter Drysdale, stresses that "economic size matters to political heft" -- a fact that can be overlooked in the
Ross Garnaut said in a recent speech on
Many economists are tipping this to happen some time between 2020 and 2030. Garnaut says it is hard to imagine the Chinese remaining for long less than a quarter as productive as Americans. In the meantime, the
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has backed the Southeast Asian nations' desire for territorial disputes in the
Influential Chinese commentators have been promoting
The newspaper said the Gillard government was thus "seen as siding with
Shen Dingli, at
A fortnight ago, Australian frigate HMAS Warramunga participated in Chinese exercises in the
The Chinese ambassador to
Recently,
Indonesian analyst Dewi Fortuna Anwar says the "increasingly aggressive rhetoric from
Including to
Singaporean academic Evelyn Goh says the key question is "whether Asians are willing either to shift into a Chinese sphere of influence, or to facilitate a highly complex negotiated power sharing arrangement between the
Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd has warned that "we are now seeing the rise of a new great power. A growing
Andrew Davies, director of operations at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, wrote of the Rudd government's 2009 defence white paper: "We come to the uncomfortable conclusion that our major ally and our major trading partner are, at some level, getting ready to fight one another."
Hugh White, professor of strategic studies at the Australian National University, who drafted much of the Howard government's defence white paper of 2000, has stirred up a furious response to his new Quarterly Essay, Power Shift -- Australia's Future Between Washington and Beijing, because of his prescription that Australia should persuade the US to accommodate China's ambitions, and should convince China to join a "concert of nations", including India and Japan, to guide Asia's future.
The core of his essay lies in the less contestable analysis that
White says that "if
He says
American analyst Robert Kaplan says while the
He expresses concern about the
White says: "If we plan to get rich on
It is also a more predictable state than most rising powers.
Despite its often opaque governance, it is no longer ruled by charismatic visionaries but by committee men who almost chronically covet consensus.
One of
Paul Monk, co-founder of Austhink Consulting and former head of
"This is not just another big player. This is the biggest player in the history of man."
Monk defines this in security terms: "The danger is less one of a large-scale military threat than of the gradual constriction of our freedom to operate in the manner to which Anglo-American naval primacy has long accustomed us."
He concludes: "The challenges we faced from