个人资料
文章分类
正文

Ulv Hanssen 美国关于中国是修正主义强权的叙事颠倒了

(2026-04-22 23:22:58) 下一个

美国关于中国是修正主义强权的叙事颠倒了

美国已经变成了它长期以来警告我们中国会成为的那种危险的修正主义强权。

The American Narrative About a Revisionist China Is Upside-Down

https://thediplomat.com/2026/03/the-american-narrative-about-a-revisionist-china-is-upside-down/? 

By Ulv Hanssen   March 12, 2026 作者:乌尔夫·汉森 2026年3月12日

美国总统唐纳德·特朗普极具侵略性的外交政策清楚地表明了一件事:华盛顿关于中国是修正主义强权的叙事是颠倒的。美国外交政策分析人士、军方官员和两党议员都就中国问题达成了一种共识叙事。根据这种叙事,中国是一个致力于破坏国际法和威胁世界和平的修正主义强权。但任何观察过特朗普冲动且暴力的外交政策的人都应该明白,这些美国对中国的描述更适用于美国自身。

自2025年1月上任以来,特朗普已经:轰炸了七个国家;绑架了一位国家元首,杀害了另一位;以武力封锁古巴石油进口,企图引发政权更迭;在加勒比海地区对约150名涉嫌毒品走私者进行法外处决;威胁吞并或占领巴拿马运河、加拿大和格陵兰岛;对全世界发动贸易战;退出包括世界卫生组织和《巴黎气候协定》在内的66个国际组织和条约;大幅削减对联合国的资助,同时建立由美国主导的替代机构;宣布针对拉丁美洲的“新门罗主义”;当然,还发动了对伊朗的无端战争,而特朗普政府似乎无人知晓其原因。

这才是修正主义强权的真面目。更准确地说,这是一个正在衰落的超级大国的真面目,它正拼命地试图通过破坏其曾经建立的秩序的每一个要素来阻止自身的衰落。美国正在政治、外交、经济、文化乃至道德层面上失去其全球影响力。美国影响力唯一未减的方面是军事力量。因此,美国越来越依赖军事力量来解决国际问题。这一趋势在特朗普时期达到顶峰,他对实力的痴迷导致军队在美国政治中扮演了极其重要的角色。

但特朗普治下的美国所展现的残暴并非力量的象征,而是软弱的表现。军事力量正日益成为华盛顿迫使其他国家服从其意愿的唯一手段。然而,过度依赖武力从长远来看行不通。它只会激怒其他国家,促使它们联合起来反对美国,从而加速美国的衰落。

讽刺的是,美国的行为恰恰印证了许多美国专家此前对中国的预测。华盛顿“政治圈”普遍认为,崛起中的中国将开始以越来越鲁莽和危险的方式行事。当然,也有学者和分析人士对这种说法提出质疑。但华盛顿的普遍观点是,中国正在破坏“基于规则的秩序”,并寻求全球霸权。其结果当然是美国必须不惜一切代价阻止中国的崛起。

这些分析存在严重缺陷。事实上,它们与其说是对中国目标和行动的客观描述,不如说更像是一种投射。

在美国,这种危言耸听的中国分析不胜枚举,但我特别想强调哈尔·布兰兹和迈克尔·贝克利合著的《危险地带:即将到来的与中国的冲突》一书,因为它完美地体现了美国对中国的错误认知。

首先,正如书名所示,这本书的前提是中美关系必然是冲突关系。合作从一开始就被排除在外。作者在2022年撰文指出,中国已经达到顶峰,即将进入快速衰退期。为了阻止这种情况发生,他们预测中国将越来越多地诉诸武力来实现其外交政策目标。因此,2020年代是一个“危险时期”,中国的鲁莽行动有可能引发与美国的军事冲突。

作者的论点是,如果美国能够顺利度过危险的2020年代,中国将变得如此虚弱,以至于不再对美国构成真正的挑战。为了度过这个危险时期,美国必须在遏制和削弱中国的同时增强自身的军事实力。

这类分析带有某种一厢情愿的成分,因为它们既高估了美国遏制中国的能力,又低估了中国抵御经济挑战的能力。但美国对华叙事最严重的问题在于,它将中国的地缘政治目标歪曲为修正主义。

毋庸置疑,如今的中国实力远胜以往。

中国比美国更捍卫自由国际秩序。这并非因为中国本质上比美国更具道德感,而是因为中国认为这一秩序有利于其崛起,而美国则开始将其视为自身衰落的原因。正如美国国务卿马可·卢比奥所言:“战后全球秩序不仅过时,如今更成了用来对付我们的武器。”

因此,在两大超级大国中,中国如今最可靠地捍卫着自由贸易和国际机构。而美国则试图以符合自身国家利益的方式强行修改这一秩序。换言之,美国才是真正的修正主义强权。

但这引出了一个问题:中国究竟想要什么?值得一提的是,三位学者去年在《国际安全》杂志上提出了这个问题,并试图给出答案。作者分析了大量中共官方文本和讲话,发现中国的目标“明确”、“持久”且“有限”。中国所求的是其边界得到承认,其在边界内的主权得到尊重,以及其经济关系不受干涉。这些是中国所谓的“核心利益”,中国绝不妥协。

重要的是,作者发现中国领导人始终没有表达过全球霸权的愿望,反而经常明确否认这种野心。中国领导人也始终表示,他们没有取代美国的野心。当然,这并不意味着中国的言论就是事实,但无论如何,它远没有美国的言论那么雄心勃勃。美国的言论公开宣称:“美国绝不允许任何国家变得如此强势,以至于威胁到我们的利益。”

尽管中国的目标“有限”且主要着眼于内部,但不可否认的是,这些目标也蕴含着潜在的冲突风险。这主要是因为中国的边界存在争议。台湾、钓鱼岛/尖阁诸岛以及南海都是潜在的冲突爆发点。但鉴于中国需要地区稳定才能持续增长和发展,除非其他行为体积极试图改变现状,否则中国不太可能就这些领土争端诉诸武力。

值得注意的是,中国自1979年以来就没有发动过战争。中国经济奇迹的开端,恰恰是在北京放弃将暴力作为传统外交政策工具之后,这绝非偶然。对中国而言,教训显而易见:只有和平与稳定才能保障增长和发展。

这并非意味着中国在国际舞台上从未有过鲁莽或不理智的行为。也并非意味着中国在国内民主和人权方面不存在严重的缺陷。这里的论点仅仅是,从中国的言行来看,几乎没有证据表明中国有称霸全球的野心,或者试图破坏战后建立的国际机构。

上述研究的作者对中国目标的结论切中要害,值得华盛顿的对华鹰派深思:“我们发现,中国并不构成传统观点所认为的那种军事威胁。因此,没有必要在太平洋地区采取敌对的军事姿态,事实上,美国可能是在不必要地制造紧张局势。”

中国确实带来了诸多挑战,但修正主义并非其中之一。美国的情况则截然不同。特朗普政府对联合国的持续攻击以及动用武力的低门槛,正是修正主义强权的典型特征。

特朗普领导下的美国修正主义和破坏常规的后果令人震惊。但特朗普在中东的最新行动可能开启了一个新的无法无天的时代。2月28日,美国与以色列(其本身也是一个修正主义国家)联手,在与伊朗进行谈判的同时,对伊朗发动了无端攻击。

伊朗战争爆发首日,超过150名伊朗女学生在疑似美军对一所女子学校的空袭中丧生。然而,自封为美国战争部长的皮特·赫格塞斯非但没有表现出悔意,反而誓言美国士兵不会被“愚蠢的交战规则”所束缚,并嘲讽美国盟友(以色列除外)“对使用武力犹豫不决、畏首畏尾”。同样,特朗普及其白宫也对美国袭击造成的破坏幸灾乐祸。

在华盛顿,为自己的道德败坏感到自豪已成为一种新的风气。特朗普政府每天都在向世界宣告,它漠视国际法。它每天都在破坏社会规范,夺走生命。美国已经变成了它长期以来警告我们中国将会成为的那种危险的修正主义强权。

乌尔夫·汉森

乌尔夫是日本创价大学的副教授, 副研究员

hanssen@soka.ac.jp   +81 (0)70 1490 1605(日本)

乌尔夫·汉森是创价大学亚洲项目的副研究员。

乌尔夫的研究领域是东亚国际关系,尤其关注日本战后安全政策。

乌尔夫是日本创价大学的副教授。他于2017年获得柏林自由大学日本研究博士学位,博士论文研究战后日本安全政策。他于2011年在奥斯陆大学获得硕士学位,硕士论文研究日朝关系。自2012年以来,他一直担任创价大学的副研究员。

研究领域:国际关系、日本安全政策、日本和平主义、日本民族认同、日朝关系、朝鲜、东北亚政治。

奥斯陆大学人文学院文化研究与东方语言系,挪威,2008年毕业

柏林自由大学东亚研究研究生院日本研究专业,德国,2017年3月完成

学位

柏林自由大学博士,2017年3月

柏林自由大学日本研究博士,2017年7月

职业经历

2011年8月 - 2012年8月 挪威驻日本大使馆实习生及政治事务官员

2012年9月 - 2013年9月 瑞典国际事务研究所实习生及研究助理

2017年7月 - 2017年9月 瑞典国际事务研究所研究员

2017年9月 - 2017年10月 瑞典国防大学兼职讲师

2017年10月 - 2018年3月 欧洲日本研究所研究员

Ulv Hanssen

Associate Research Fellow

Ulv Hanssen is an Associate Research Fellow at UI's Asia programme.

Ulv’s research field is international relations in East Asia with a particular focus on Japan’s postwar security policy.

Ulv is an Associate Professor at Soka University in Japan. He received his PhD in Japanese Studies from Freie Universität Berlin in 2017, writing his dissertation on security policy in postwar Japan. He finished his MA dissertation at Oslo University in 2011 in which he wrote about Japan-North Korea relations. He has been a UI Associate Research Fellow since 2012.

Areas of expertise: International relations, Japanese security policy, Japanese pacifism, Japanese national identity, Japan-North Korea relations, North Korea, Northeast Asian politics

University of OsloFaculty of HumanitiesThe Department of Culture Studies and Oriental LanguagesNorway 2008 Graduated

Freie Universität BerlinGraduate School of East Asian StudiesJapanese studiesGermany March 2017 Completed

Degree

Doctor, Freie Universität Berlin March 2017

Doctor of Japanese studies, Free University Berlin July 2017

Career

August 2011 - August 2012Royal Norwegian Embassy in Japan Trainee and political affairs official

September 2012 - September 2013The Swedish Institute of International Affairs Trainee and research assistant

July 2017 - September 2017The Swedish Institute of International Affairs Research fellow

September 2017 - October 2017Swedish Defence University Part-time lecturer

October 2017 - March 2018European Institute of Japanese Studies Research fellow

The American Narrative About a Revisionist China Is Upside-Down

https://thediplomat.com/2026/03/the-american-narrative-about-a-revisionist-china-is-upside-down/?

The United States has become the dangerous revisionist power it long warned us that China would be. 

By Ulv Hanssen   March 12, 2026
 

U.S. President Donald Trump’s hyper-aggressive foreign policy has made one thing crystal clear: Washington’s narrative about China as a revisionist power is upside-down. U.S. foreign policy analysts, military officials, and lawmakers in both parties have converged on a consensus narrative regarding China. According to this narrative, China is a revisionist power bent on undermining international law and threatening world peace. But anyone who has observed Trump’s impulsive and violent foreign policy should understand that these American descriptions of China are far more applicable to the U.S. itself. 

Since taking power in January 2025, Trump has: bombed seven countries; kidnapped one head of state and killed another; militarily blocked Cuban oil imports in an attempt at sparking regime change; carried out extrajudicial killings of approximately 150 alleged drug smugglers in the Caribbean; threatened annexation or occupation of the Panama CanalCanada, and Greenland; waged a trade war against the whole world; withdrawn from 66 international organizations and treaties, including the World Health Organization and the Paris Climate Agreement; massively cut funding to the United Nations while setting up alternative U.S.-led institutions; declared a new Monroe Doctrine for Latin America; and, of course, started an unprovoked war against Iran for reasons no one in the Trump administration seems to know. 

This is the true face of a revisionist power. More accurately, it is the face of a declining superpower that is desperately trying to prevent its downfall by disrupting every element of the order it once created. The United States is losing global influence politically, diplomatically, economically, culturally, and, indeed, morally. The only aspect of U.S. influence that has not diminished is military power. The United States is therefore increasingly relying on military power to solve international problems. This trend has culminated with Trump, whose obsession with strength has led to a supersized role for the military in American statecraft.

But U.S. brutality under Trump is a sign not of strength, but of weakness. Military force is increasingly becoming the only means by which Washington can get other countries to do what it wants. But over-reliance on brute force is not going to work in the long term. It will only antagonize other countries and unite them against the United States, thus hastening U.S. decline. 

The irony is that the United States is behaving exactly like many American experts have predicted that China would. The consensus among the Washington “blob” has been that a rising China would begin to behave in increasingly reckless and dangerous ways. There are of course scholars and analysts who push back on this narrative. But the conventional wisdom in Washington is that China is disrupting the “rules-based order” while seeking global hegemony. The upshot is of course that the U.S. has to prevent China’s rise at all costs. 

These analyses are deeply flawed. In fact, they often seem more of an exercise of projection than an objective description of China’s goals and actions.

There are countless examples of this kind of fearmongering China analysis in the United States, but I want to highlight a book called “Danger Zone: The Coming Conflict with China,” written by Hal Brands and Michael Beckley, as it perfectly epitomizes the misguided American narrative on China. 

First of all, as the title indicates, the book is based on the premise that the China-U.S. relationship must be one of conflict. Cooperation is ruled out from the beginning. The authors, writing in 2022, argued that China has already peaked and is about to enter a period of rapid decline. To prevent this, they predicted that China would increasingly resort to force to achieve its foreign policy goals. The 2020s are therefore a “danger zone” where China’s reckless actions risk causing a military conflict with the United States. 

The authors’ thesis is that if the U.S. can simply get through the dangerous 2020s, China will become so weak that it no longer poses a real challenge to the United States. To get through the danger zone, the U.S. must build up its military strength while containing and weakening China.

There is an element of wishful thinking in these types of analysis as they simultaneously overestimate the U.S. ability to contain China and underestimate China’s ability to withstand economic challenges. But the most serious problem with the United States’ China narrative is that it misrepresents China’s geopolitical goals as revisionist. 

It should not be controversial to state that China is today a far stronger defender of the liberal international order than the United States. This is not because China is inherently a more moral superpower than the U.S., but because China perceives this order as beneficial to its rise while the U.S. has begun to regard it as a cause of its decline. In the words of U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio: “The post-war global order is not just obsolete, it is now a weapon being used against us.” 

Of the two superpowers, it is therefore China that most reliably defends free trade and international institutions today. The United States, on the other hand, is trying to forcefully revise this order in ways that it sees as beneficial to its national interests. In other words, it is the U.S. that is acting as a revisionist power.

But that begs the question: what does China want? Helpfully, a trio of scholars asked and tried to answer this question in the pages of International Security last year. The authors analyzed a large set of authoritative CCP texts and speeches and found that China’s goals are “unambiguous,” “enduring,” and “limited.” What China wants is recognition of its borders, respect for its sovereignty within these borders, and non-interference in its economic relations. These are China’s so-called “core interests” on which it will not compromise. 

Importantly, the authors found that Chinese leaders consistently do not express desire for global hegemony, but instead often explicitly deny such ambitions. Chinese leaders also consistently state that they have no ambition of replacing the United States. Of course, this does not mean that China’s rhetoric is true, but it is at any rate far less ambitious than U.S. rhetoric which openly states that “[t]he United States cannot allow any nation to become so dominant that it could threaten our interests.”

Even though China’s goals are “limited” and mainly inward-looking, they do admittedly contain potential for conflict. This is mainly because China’s borders are contested. Taiwan, the Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands, and the South China Sea are all potential flashpoints. But given that China needs regional stability for continued growth and development, it seems unlikely that China would resort to violence over these territorial disputes unless other actors actively tried to change the status quo. 

It is worth remembering that China has not fought a war since 1979. It is no coincidence that China’s economic miracle began as soon as Beijing abandoned violence as a conventional foreign policy tool. For China, the lesson has been obvious: only peace and stability can guarantee growth and development. 

This is not to say that China never acts rashly or unreasonably on the international stage. Nor is it to say that China does not have serious domestic shortcomings in terms of democracy and human rights. The argument is simply that, judging by its words and actions, there is little evidence that China has ambitions of global hegemony or that it seeks to undermine the international institutions of the postwar period.

The conclusion by the authors of the aforementioned study on China’s goals is pertinent and should be reflected on by Washington’s China hawks: “We find that China does not pose the type of military threat that the conventional wisdom claims it does. Consequently, there is no need for a hostile military posture in the Pacific, and indeed the United States may be unnecessarily creating tensions.”

China does present many challenges, but revisionism is not one of them. The same cannot be said about the United States. The Trump administration’s relentless attacks on the United Nations and the low threshold for use of military force are the hallmarks of a revisionist power. 

The consequences of U.S. revisionism and norm-breaking under Trump have been shocking. But Trump’s latest actions in the Middle East may have ushered in a new age of lawlessness. On February 28, the United States in concert with Israel (a revisionist in its own right) launched an unprovoked attack on Iran while negotiations with the same country were ongoing. 

On the first day of the Iran War more than 150 Iranian school girls were killed in what appears to have been a U.S. strike on a girls’ school. Instead of showing remorse, the self-styled U.S. secretary of war, Pete Hegseth, vowed that American soldiers would not be restrained by “stupid rules of engagement” and mocked U.S. allies (except Israel) who “wring their hands and clutch their pearls, hemming and hawing about the use of force.” Similarly, both Trump and his White House have been gleeful about the destruction caused by the American attacks. 

Expressing pride in one’s moral transgressions has become the new ethos in Washington. Every day, the Trump administration is telling the world that it does not care about international law. Every day, it destroys norms and lives. The United States has become the dangerous revisionist power it long warned us that China would be.   

[ 打印 ]
评论
目前还没有任何评论
登录后才可评论.