Confronting China's charm offensive in East Asia: A simple case of fighting fire with fire?

This article examines the United States' response to China's charm offensive in East Asia, particularly the latter's use of soft-power diplomacy to erode Washington's strategic preponderance and its ability to respond to a crisis in the Taiwan Strait and other hot spots in the re...

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Main Author: De Castro, Renato Cruz
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Published: Animo Repository 2009
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2607
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-36062021-10-19T06:55:05Z Confronting China's charm offensive in East Asia: A simple case of fighting fire with fire? De Castro, Renato Cruz This article examines the United States' response to China's charm offensive in East Asia, particularly the latter's use of soft-power diplomacy to erode Washington's strategic preponderance and its ability to respond to a crisis in the Taiwan Strait and other hot spots in the region. In such a situation, U.S. analysts, diplomats, and policymakers have become apprehensive that the United States is losing in the soft-power competition with China. Accordingly, they clamor for increased U.S. funding for public diplomacy and official development assistance (ODA). This article, however, raises the question whether overemphasis on U.S. soft power will rectify the imbalance of influence between the two powers. In conclusion, it argues that the apparent disparity is the result of the general asymmetry in the two countries' power relations and that what is consequential is not the amount earmarked for ODA and public diplomacy spending, but the United States' prudent use of its co-optive capability in the face of China's growing political and economic clout in East Asia. This entails applying U.S. soft power not only to constrain China's charm offensive, but also to form and strengthen an association of liberal-democratic states in East Asia. © Institute of International Relations, National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan (ROC). 2009-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2607 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository United States--Foreign relations--East Asia East Asia--Foreign relations--United States United States--Foreign relations--China China--Foreign relations--United States International Relations
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic United States--Foreign relations--East Asia
East Asia--Foreign relations--United States
United States--Foreign relations--China
China--Foreign relations--United States
International Relations
spellingShingle United States--Foreign relations--East Asia
East Asia--Foreign relations--United States
United States--Foreign relations--China
China--Foreign relations--United States
International Relations
De Castro, Renato Cruz
Confronting China's charm offensive in East Asia: A simple case of fighting fire with fire?
description This article examines the United States' response to China's charm offensive in East Asia, particularly the latter's use of soft-power diplomacy to erode Washington's strategic preponderance and its ability to respond to a crisis in the Taiwan Strait and other hot spots in the region. In such a situation, U.S. analysts, diplomats, and policymakers have become apprehensive that the United States is losing in the soft-power competition with China. Accordingly, they clamor for increased U.S. funding for public diplomacy and official development assistance (ODA). This article, however, raises the question whether overemphasis on U.S. soft power will rectify the imbalance of influence between the two powers. In conclusion, it argues that the apparent disparity is the result of the general asymmetry in the two countries' power relations and that what is consequential is not the amount earmarked for ODA and public diplomacy spending, but the United States' prudent use of its co-optive capability in the face of China's growing political and economic clout in East Asia. This entails applying U.S. soft power not only to constrain China's charm offensive, but also to form and strengthen an association of liberal-democratic states in East Asia. © Institute of International Relations, National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan (ROC).
format text
author De Castro, Renato Cruz
author_facet De Castro, Renato Cruz
author_sort De Castro, Renato Cruz
title Confronting China's charm offensive in East Asia: A simple case of fighting fire with fire?
title_short Confronting China's charm offensive in East Asia: A simple case of fighting fire with fire?
title_full Confronting China's charm offensive in East Asia: A simple case of fighting fire with fire?
title_fullStr Confronting China's charm offensive in East Asia: A simple case of fighting fire with fire?
title_full_unstemmed Confronting China's charm offensive in East Asia: A simple case of fighting fire with fire?
title_sort confronting china's charm offensive in east asia: a simple case of fighting fire with fire?
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2009
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2607
_version_ 1715215559452262400