Qin Yaqing, president of China Foreign Affairs University
Qin Yaqing (1953- ), a leading scholar on international relations in China, is considered as an outstanding theorist on constructivism in China and a pioneer in the Chinese school of IR theory. He is the author of Hegemonic System and International Conflict; Power, Institutions and Cultures; and Relations and Processes: Cultural Construction of Chinese International Relations Theory. Currently, Qin is the president of China Foreign Affairs University, a member of the Foreign Policy Advisory Committee of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China, and vice-president of the China National Association for International Studies.
China’s peaceful rise is no doubt a major event in international relations in the 21st century. As many believe, the rise of a new power inevitably challenges the existing international system. However, unlike Western powers, which have a history of conflict when power shifts, China has practiced a cooperative international strategy since it started its reform and opening up more than three decades ago. How has China achieved a peaceful rise? What influence will China’s rise have on the international order? A CSST reporter interviewed China Foreign Affairs University President Qin Yaqing on these issues.
CSST: Chinese President Xi Jinping stressed the necessity of great power diplomacy with Chinese characteristics at the Central Conference on Work Relating to Foreign Affairs in an effort to realize the two centenary goals. Great power diplomacy with Chinese characteristics is an innovation of Chinese diplomatic philosophy. What’s your opinion on this concept?
Qin: Great power diplomacy with Chinese characteristics, as is interpreted, has rich connotations, including a persistent pursuit of the Chinese path to development and concerning such aspects as social institutions, cultural traditions, and core values. It is also characterized by an insistence on democratization of international relations, opposition to all forms of hegemony and power politics, perseverance in constructing a new type of international relations, and following the right approach to principles and interests.
First, China’s engagement in the international system is a strategic choice on its own initiative, realized through its cooperative practices over the past three decades. Reform and opening-up are the twin policies inseparable from each other, and both have been China’s choices and together form China’s overall national and international strategy. It has not been merely “taught” as some Western mainstream IR theories have predicted.
Second, in terms of key issues and matters of principle, China will not sacrifice its core national interests for an opportunity to join the international institutions.
Third, China’s participation in the international system is not a passive process. Rather, it is an active process in which China and the international system interact and exert mutual influence. China has observed international rules in many fields, and at the same time, China’s concepts and proposals have won approval and support as shown by the effects of its innovative practices.
CSST: Does China’s emphasis on and persistent pursuit of independence in diplomatic affairs mean that it will challenge the existing international order, even in a violent way? The debate in the international community has always been whether China is a power that aims to maintain the status quo or to challenge it. What’s your opinion?
Qin: Let me use a study by our research team. In order for a comprehensive and thorough analysis of China’s engagement in the reform and evolution of the international system, our team tracked and analyzed 15 cases of China’s engagement in the international institutions in economic, security and cultural fields.
We found a commonality in these three fields despite varying paces of action and participation. From the very beginning of the reform and opening-up, China started its engagement in a cooperative manner, namely to open itself to the international system and to participate in multilateral institutions while pursuing an independent foreign policy of peace. It is by taking this position that China has maintained a stable relationship with the international system and become a responsible member of international society.
CSST: Scholars found in an investigation into public opinion toward China’s peaceful development that the majority view China as pursuing a peaceful development but remain uncertain as to whether China will seek hegemony. How do you see the trend of China’s relations with the international system?
Qin: China’s practices of participating in the existing international institutions were necessitated by its strategic decision to reform and open itself up to the outside world. It is such practices that led to a benign interactive process between China and international society. China’s willing participation in the multilateral institutions and the largely positive recognition of China’s identity and role by the international community have resulted in the unfolding of a constructive process toward a possible evolution of the international order for sustainable security. During this process, two factors are of great significance: China’s peaceful development strategy and the positive response from the international community. They have constituted the necessary conditions and facilitated the construction of a positive relationship between the two. Of course, it is a long and open process, and how it develops will continue to depend on the nature of the interactive practices on both sides.
CSST: Currently, the international system is undergoing a new round of profound adjustment. With the international prestige of China growing, there are more opportunities for clarifying gray areas in interactions between China and the international system. What can China contribute to the reform and evolution of the international order?
Qin: There are at least three ways in which China can contribute to the evolution of the international system and international order.
First, China’s engagement will promote a pluralistic mode of global governance. The hegemonic stability theory argues that a hegemonic power is crucial in establishing the international order, for it provides necessary international rules and public goods for governance. Neoliberal institutionalism also believes in such a role played by the hegemon. The problem with these theories is that we are now living in a pluralistic world that requires a pluralistic model of governance. Participation by China as well as developing nations will encourage such a model.
Second, China’s involvement in the international system will bring forth the idea of partnership and put it into practice. It will influence the evolution of the international order. Partnership is a re-identification of relations among actors in the international community. It suggests that state as well as non-state actors in the international community are not necessarily hostile to one another as described in the realpolitik theory, nor are they related or cooperative solely based on self-interests as depicted by rational choice theory. Partnership is based on trust and respect, reflecting the idea of relational governance, which complements rule-based governance. Rule-based governance and relational governance combined means produce a more effective way of global governance, a model that respects rules, values human relations, and believes in morality, leading to a fiduciary society.
Third, China’s positive participation in the international system will promote its legitimacy and lead to a genuine evolution of the international order. The existing international institutions were established by the Western nations and for the governance of their relations during a certain period of history. Now in an increasingly globalizing world more non-Western nations have been joining the international system. If they were perceived as subjects to the power of the international institutions and could only be taught to follow the existing rules, such governance would not be legitimate and therefore could not help to maintain a stable and sustainable international order. Participatory practices that include all are the necessary condition for the legitimacy of global governance and an effective way of overcoming the sense of alienation among the majority of international society.