By People's Daily Online, and its author PD senior desk editor Ding Gang
BEIJING, Jan. 24 -- With President Barack Obama
entering the White House, the curtain of the "great reform drama" in U.S.
foreign policy has raised. Then, Hillary Rodham Clinton, the new secretary of
state, has undoubtedly come to the limelight to be the most conspicuous,
outstanding figure among those players "ascending the stage".
"Smart power", as a new-fangled concept sprinkled
through Hillary's confirmation hearing in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
on January 13 has drawn worldwide attention. The word "smart" heralds in a
vivid, concentrated way an incoming change of U.S. foreign policy.
Hillary Clinton has now formally set forth the "smart
power" concept, which was first proposed and later enriched by Harvard
intellectual Joseph Nye Jr. and some other ace American scholars. With the
introduction of smart power, she was designed apparently to direct at new
conservative foreign policies of President George W. Bush's aggressive
unilateral strategy, which one-sidedly stresses the "hard power". In recent
years, the Bush strategy has not only inflicted heavy losses to the U.S.' hard
power but let its image slide down drastically worldwide. So, the nation's
foreign policy has come to a dead end and the situation has to change.
On the definition of "smart power", she was quoted as
saying that "we must use what has been called smart power, the full range of
tools at our disposal ¨C diplomatic, economic, military, political, legal and
cultural ¨C picking the right tool or combination of fools for each situation",
so as to resume the U.S.' global leading position.
In the years to come, the United States will not only
unite with its friends but also engage its adversaries; it will not only
maintain and fortify the existing allies, but also conduct new cooperation. In
short, "smart power" is neither hard nor soft, but to shift onto the synergetic
integration of hard power with soft power from the excessive use of hard power
or force.
It can be envisaged that the U.S., which is to resort
increasingly more to "smart power", will appear with a goodwill and bona fides
and possibly focus more of its attention to seeking moral support and,
tactically to increasing its communications and coordination with all parties,
big powers in particular. Such changes are now not so novel as a matter of
course, since the Bush administration already made some similar changes during
its second term of office.
The change of the U.S. from a very haughty, arrogant
global power to one with a greater aspiration for cooperation deserves an
endorsement of the international community anyway. At the same time, however, we
should also acknowledge that what future changes the US foreign policy will
bring about is precisely not the strategic goal but ways to attain it. The U.S.
has not and will not alter the general orientation of spreading or disseminating
its American-style democracy and freedom and defending its global interests.
This is where our special heed should be given while trying to get to know the
concept of "smart power"
To China, this new concept has given rise to an
additional amount of skepticism: What kind of the U.S.' China policy is
contained in the "smart power"? Or how the new administration's policy towards
China would differ from the preceding Bush government?
Overall, the new US government will also go on
extending the existing policies toward China on some key issues, but there are
expected to be some changes with the application of "smart power". What merits
particular attention is that the U.S. will attach more importance to its
cooperation and coordination with China on such global issues as climate change,
energy, the war on terrorism and joint efforts to cope with global financial
crisis; the U.S. will look forward even more to promoting bilateral cooperation
for the settlement of multilateral issues in a bid to safeguard its global
interests.
To be frank, China and the U.S. should further
enhance their coordination on the resolution of global issues, so as to help
create a still bigger space with more win-win opportunities and facilitate their
mutual trust. On the other hand, the U.S. will set forth more demands on China
by inferring to it as a "responsible global responsibilities" and the
"responsible stakeholder". On her remarks about the U.S.' China policies to the
Senate Reform Committee, Hillary said "China is a critically important actor in
a changing global landscape."
As "smart power" represents merely a strategic
adjustment, the thorny issues that often created troubles for China, such as
those regarding Taiwan and Tibet, the arms sale to Taiwan and the human rights,
will not vanish once and for all. Whether Sino-US relations will continue to
retain a sound momentum for stable growth, the crux of the matter is whether the
two nations will respect each other's core interests and give them due
consideration.
(Source: peoplesdaily.cn)