Parsing China’s geostrategic designs in the post-war Afghanistan
https://doi.org/10.17994/IT.2022.20.3.70.1
Abstract
China boasts prolonged history of relations with Afghanistan. Throughout the 2010s, China has seen Afghanistan as a key part of what can be described the dynamically transnational “Belt-Road-Initiative”. Now with the Taliban takeover of the country, the question arises how China would be able to play a premier role in the post-war Afghanistan while trying to shun itself to be embroiled into the geopolitical mire as the superpowers did in history? The current study addresses two questions through an analytical-empirical approach to how China will realize its geostrategic design in Afghanistan. First, what are China’s objectives which are supposed to differ from those of the USSR and the USA? Second, why would China likely succeed in the country where the superpowers had failed before? Over the past decades, China has geared up its strategic ties with Russia, Pakistan, Iran, known as the Eurasian partners on the Afghan issue, and Central Asian states which are either the neighbors of Afghanistan or the member states of the SCO. Since Beijing endorses multilateralism and inclusive partnership in foreign affairs, it will unlikely act alone on the issue of Afghanistan. Rather, China is supposed to work on it through triple-level platforms–the Eurasian partners, SCO member states with border proximity of Afghanistan and the multilateral organizations such as the U.N. and the G-20–to fulfill its geostrategic designs in Afghanistan.
About the Authors
Fan Yao-TianChina
Fan Yao-Tian
Beijing, 100872
Wang Li
China
Wang Li
Changchun, 130013
References
1. Bender P. (2003). Weltmacht Amerika. Das Neue Rom. Stuttgart: J. G. Cottasche Buchhandlung Nachfolger GmbH. 295 p.
2. Hirono M. (2019). China’s Conflict Mediation & Durability of the Principle of Non-Interference: The Case of Post-2014 Afghanistan. The China Quarterly. Vol. 239. P. 614–634.
3. Kissinger H. (1994). Diplomacy. NY: Simon & Schuster. 813 p.
4. Kissinger H. (2014). World Order: Reflections on the Character of Nations and the Course of History. NY: Allen Lane. 432 p.
5. Morgenthau H.J.,Thompson K. (1985). Politics among Nations – the struggle for power and peace, 6th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill Publishing Company.
6. Nixon R. (2013). 1999: Victory Without War. New York: Simon & Schuster. 302 p.
7. Trenin D. (2021). The Impact of Sino-American Rivalry on Russia’s Relations with China. Carnegie Moscow Center. October 18. URL: https://carnegiemoscow.org/commentary/85580 (accessed: 14.02.2022).
8. Valori G.E. (2021). After Decades of War, Can China give Afghanistan a chance of stability. Modern Diplomacy. August 6.
9. Xi J. (2017). China’s Diplomacy as a Major Country. In The Governance of China. Beijing: Foreign Language Press. 619 p.
10. Zhao H. (2012). China and Afghanistan: China’s interests, position and outlook. Russian Studies. No. 5. P. 1–16.
Review
For citations:
Yao-Tian F., Li W. Parsing China’s geostrategic designs in the post-war Afghanistan. International Trends / Mezhdunarodnye protsessy. 2022;20(3):45-54. https://doi.org/10.17994/IT.2022.20.3.70.1