China\'s global business needs backup of military pow ...

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/05/03 11:04:13
China's global business needs backup of military power

2011-10-25 (China Military News cited from Global Times and by Mo Luo) -- I read on a microblog the other day that it is dangerous to be an extremist country. The author argues that people will shun it as they will shun an extreme person, and that China needs friends. He accuses people who want to use China's military might to guard its business of being stuck in an imperialist 19th century mentality that China suffered from when invaded by Britain during the opium wars.

I'd like to talk about such narratives. The West has used military operations to guard its business interests for the past 500 years, from the era of open piracy to the current days of the market economy.

The West opened Chinese markets with cannons in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). To preserve its Indian market, 50,000 British and 200,000 Indian soldiers were stationed in India. The idea of literally conquering foreign markets has not lost momentum in the 21st century. Take the US interventions in the Middle East, for instance.

On the other hand, Chinese companies are left to face foreign markets without the sense of security granted by a military presence. Stood in the market defenseless, we are facing fierce Western competitors who bullied their way into the market and so can set the rules of the game. A noticeable recent example is the military intervention by the West in Libya that posed a grand total of over $10 billion of investment from China at great risk.

Many countries that enjoy prestigious positions today were first feared by others, then respected and even admired. The influence of the US is based on the military bases in more than 140 countries and regions. When China tried to reduce its export of rare earths, the WTO dominated by the Western countries concluded that it broke the rules.

The US restricting Chinese export of tyres, however, is said to be just righteous. Also, China is helpless in the face of the Western ban on high-tech and arms sales. What is behind these rules? Isn't it the "sword?"A disguised sword is never justice.

Acknowledging the rule does not grant us full freedom of action. I can hardly imagine that China will someday be involved in full-on gunboat diplomacy to force open a foreign market. However, it does not mean we should stand aside defenseless.

Display of potential military strength is not only necessary, but also essential, for future development of our economic power.

The implications of not acknowledging the value and necessity of military power are two, both highly unfavorable. One, we might be reduced to a country that suffers from collective illusion of national pride, self-deceivingly sucking up any incidence of injustice in the global market with an idiotic smile.

It is certainly not helpful for a healthy development of national spirit and general wisdom. And it might also encourage further evasion of our national interests.

An invariably humble foreign policy that strictly prioritizes harmonious relationship and the value of compromise will reduce us to a country that serves as an ATM machine for the West and a charity for the developing world.

This direction, in which we are heading, is laughable at best and comes at the cost of the working-class majority.

There is an old saying in the classic Chinese novel Outlaws of the Marsh that every true friend is one made through various forms of conflict; no friend is made through obsequious soliciting.

If we carry on our current foreign policy, buying our way into international relations, we are placing ourselves into the vulnerability of possible betrayal and disappointment.

Former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi learnt this lesson; after trying to buy off Western public and government opinion with generous "charity donations," the same countries, such as France, whose institutions received his funds, still intervened in Libya.

International relations follow the same formula as social interactions. True friendship is formed through hardship and conflict.

China's global business needs backup of military power

2011-10-25 (China Military News cited from Global Times and by Mo Luo) -- I read on a microblog the other day that it is dangerous to be an extremist country. The author argues that people will shun it as they will shun an extreme person, and that China needs friends. He accuses people who want to use China's military might to guard its business of being stuck in an imperialist 19th century mentality that China suffered from when invaded by Britain during the opium wars.

I'd like to talk about such narratives. The West has used military operations to guard its business interests for the past 500 years, from the era of open piracy to the current days of the market economy.

The West opened Chinese markets with cannons in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). To preserve its Indian market, 50,000 British and 200,000 Indian soldiers were stationed in India. The idea of literally conquering foreign markets has not lost momentum in the 21st century. Take the US interventions in the Middle East, for instance.

On the other hand, Chinese companies are left to face foreign markets without the sense of security granted by a military presence. Stood in the market defenseless, we are facing fierce Western competitors who bullied their way into the market and so can set the rules of the game. A noticeable recent example is the military intervention by the West in Libya that posed a grand total of over $10 billion of investment from China at great risk.

Many countries that enjoy prestigious positions today were first feared by others, then respected and even admired. The influence of the US is based on the military bases in more than 140 countries and regions. When China tried to reduce its export of rare earths, the WTO dominated by the Western countries concluded that it broke the rules.

The US restricting Chinese export of tyres, however, is said to be just righteous. Also, China is helpless in the face of the Western ban on high-tech and arms sales. What is behind these rules? Isn't it the "sword?"A disguised sword is never justice.

Acknowledging the rule does not grant us full freedom of action. I can hardly imagine that China will someday be involved in full-on gunboat diplomacy to force open a foreign market. However, it does not mean we should stand aside defenseless.

Display of potential military strength is not only necessary, but also essential, for future development of our economic power.

The implications of not acknowledging the value and necessity of military power are two, both highly unfavorable. One, we might be reduced to a country that suffers from collective illusion of national pride, self-deceivingly sucking up any incidence of injustice in the global market with an idiotic smile.

It is certainly not helpful for a healthy development of national spirit and general wisdom. And it might also encourage further evasion of our national interests.

An invariably humble foreign policy that strictly prioritizes harmonious relationship and the value of compromise will reduce us to a country that serves as an ATM machine for the West and a charity for the developing world.

This direction, in which we are heading, is laughable at best and comes at the cost of the working-class majority.

There is an old saying in the classic Chinese novel Outlaws of the Marsh that every true friend is one made through various forms of conflict; no friend is made through obsequious soliciting.

If we carry on our current foreign policy, buying our way into international relations, we are placing ourselves into the vulnerability of possible betrayal and disappointment.

Former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi learnt this lesson; after trying to buy off Western public and government opinion with generous "charity donations," the same countries, such as France, whose institutions received his funds, still intervened in Libya.

International relations follow the same formula as social interactions. True friendship is formed through hardship and conflict.

搞什么鸟语啊?! 幸亏鸟语过四级了 还能看看
还好我法语比较好,能看懂50-60%
上面两个都是鸟人
就我一个天使?
楼主好有异国情调
还好我日语比较好,能看懂50-60%
卖弄风骚,为什么不翻译啊?
还好我会西班牙语,能看懂50-60%
还好我中文不错 可以回贴
好歹标题翻译下吧。。。
中国的全球贸易需要军力支持
写的这是神马,这作者德语水平一般
哥棒语刚刚学会一点就能全部看懂了。
还好我葡萄牙语还凑合,也就看懂50%-60%
这外太空文字一般,幸好学了中文,可以看懂和回帖。
还好汉语拼音能认全,能看懂 50%-60%  
幸好我没上过学,还能知道那50-60%可能是字.
光用拼音也能打这么长的文章,这位作者好厉害啊
还好我学过盲文,能摸懂50%-60%
还好我会说唐山话,能看懂个50-60%
如果楼主是鸟人,我可以理解你发这贴,如果楼猪是中国人,那楼主就是个蔡国庆
看到楼上诸位,我果然弱爆了~~~
介不四那个嘛么
无非是26个字母,100%认的。
就看了标题:中国的全球经济需要军事力量做后盾。
我是进来看回复的
我只懂“FUCKYOU”所以只能用“FUCKYOU”回帖了
靠,搞了半天原来是蝌蚪文,现在看懂了。
以后不要贴这种鸟语了,毕竟是国人论坛,不是国际。虽然偶鸟语专业8级。
本人文盲一枚  表示什么都看不懂
还好我会拼音,都能读出来
还好我不会鸟语,才知道这就是鸟语
LZ好歹翻译下,这棒子语看不懂啊
还好学过梦话,看得懂楼上看不懂剩下的那些
还好以前学了英语了,这写字母我全认识,但不知道写什么哎
longxia 发表于 2011-10-27 09:40
好歹标题翻译下吧。。。
中国的全球贸易需要军力支持
啊~我文盲,知道这一句就够了。三克油。
这美国话~~就像看我们看其他地方用方言写的文章~~大概懂~~~~
我就知道无链接
真不明白中国的教育,从一年级开始学英语到大学怎么还是看不懂英语。
还好我學過些西伯利亞味的白頭鷹語,勉強能看懂20-30%