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Published byHenry Singleton Modified over 9 years ago
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Russia in the East Asian Context
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4 of the world’s 10 most populous countries China: 1,286 bln. (No.1) USA: 290 mln. (No.3) Russia: 145 mln. (No.7) Japan: 127 mln. (No.10)
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GDP, PPP, US$: USA – 10.5 trln. China – 6 trln. Japan – 3.6 trln. Russia – 1.4 trln.
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Data for 2001
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Four Great Powers 2 maritime – Japan, US 2 continental – China, Russia Maritime as challengers Continental as status-quo 20 th century - 2 communist, 2 capitalist 3 of the 4 (Japan, Russia, China) underwent repeated rapid modernizations in the past 150 years Japan fought the 3 others, ultimately lost Russia-China-US: have been both competitors and allies The 2 withdrawals of Russia’s power Economics and security The legacy of wars: The absence of a peace treaty between Russia and Japan The unresolved Korean problems The problem of Taiwan
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CHINA The former (and future?) regional superpower The long decline of China Imperialist expansion in East Asia Russia Britain US Germany Japan
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The 20 th century: Clashes of empires: Russia-Japan, Japan-US, Japan-Britain The 2 communist revolutions: Russia, 1917 China, 1949 China’s revival: Revolution Independence Modernization Balance of power strategies Potential regional hegemony, based primarily on economic power
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RUSSIA The easy expansion to the Pacific (17 th -20 th centuries) Trade over security Taking advantage of China’s decline The fatal clash with Japan, 1904-1905 The communist transformation (modernization, security, ideology, geopolitics) Alliance with China (since the 1920s) Support of Chinese Communists WW2: Alliance with the US and China against Japan Cold War: Alliance with China against US and Japan 1950s: the apex of Russia’s influence in the region 1960s-1970s: conflict with China, detente with the US Late 1970s-1980s: US and China contain Russia Late 1980s-2000s: Russia turns inward, exits geopolitical competition, improves relations with US, China, Japan, undergoes transition crisis
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What explains the ebb and flow of Russia’s power?
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JAPAN The Meiji Revolution Emergence from isolation Modernization The 1905 victory and the rise of imperialism The 1945 defeat and post-imperial modernization The Cold War alliance with the US Economic competition with the US Geopolitical uncertainties Interests in China and Russia Security concerns
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USA Manifest Destiny and Open Door: Pacific expansion, economic and military tools Collusion and collision with Japan The alliance with Russia against Japan The apex of American power: 1945 The Communist challenge The defeat in Vietnam The US-China alignment against Russia The Japanese economic challenge The end of the Cold War: new US hegemony, East Asian counterbalances The Chinese challenge to US
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6 bilateral relationships: patterns and trends Russia-China USA-Japan Russia-USA Russia-Japan USA-China China-Japan Assess each relationship in each of the 3 areas on a scale from +5 (highly cooperative) to -5 (highly competitive)
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SECURITY threats, military potentials, nature of cooperation ECONOMY resources, markets, capitals IDEOLOGY role of the state in society and economy China-Russia China-US China-Japan Russia-US Russia-Japan Japan-US
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For each country, it is important: Not to allow a hostile combination of the others To maintain good relations with the 3 others Competition vs. cooperation Sources of competition Factors for cooperation
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