Soft balancing against the US 'pivot to Asia': China's geostrategic rationale for establishing the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank

被引:32
|
作者
Chan, Lai-Ha [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Technol Sydney, Sch Commun, Social & Polit Sci Program, Sydney, NSW, Australia
关键词
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB); Eurasia; One Belt; One Road (OBOR); soft balancing; US hegemony;
D O I
10.1080/10357718.2017.1357679
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
The existing accounts about the China-led multilateral development bankthe Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)have focused on the USA's policy concerns and the economic and commercial reasons for China having established it. Two deeper questions are left unaddressed: Was there any strategic rationale for China to initiate a new multilateral development bank and, if so, how effective is China's strategy? From a neorealist balance-of-power perspective, this article argues that China has felt threatened by the Obama administration's rebalance to the Asia-Pacific strategy. In response, China is opting for a soft-balancing policy to carve out a regional security space in Eurasia in order to mitigate the threat coming from its east. China's material power, premised on the fact that the country is a huge domestic market and flush with cash, has proved irresistible for Asian states, with the exception of Japan, to be enticed away from the USA. On the one hand, this article adds weight to the claim that although the USA remains the pre-eminent military power in the Asia-Pacific, it has fallen into a relative decline in regional economic governance; on the other, China's soft balancing has its own limitations in forming like-minded partnerships with, and offering security guarantees to, AIIB members. A China-led regional order is yet to have arrived, even with the AIIB.
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页码:568 / 590
页数:23
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