Posted on 10/30/2013 10:23:43 PM PDT by cunning_fish
By virtue of our unique geography, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton wrote in a 2011 Foreign Policy article, the United States is both an Atlantic and a Pacific power. Russia, meanwhile, has seen itself as a Euro-Asian country, as Vladimir Putin has argued from the start of his first term in the Kremlin. The American attitude, which in Secretary Clintons locution is about as uncontroversial a statement as an American Secretary of State can make, reflects the countrys historic maritime vocation. The Russian one reflects the longstanding fascination with the countrys continental scale and reflects its traditional terrestrial focus. It is really no surprise, when you think about it, that during the space race Americans fetched their returning astronauts at sea, while Russians did so over land.
Despite these different conceptions of the Pacific, which is now the most dynamic region in the world, both the United States and the Russian Federation have made similar mistakes. The most striking of these has been the equation of the Pacific Rim with Asia and Asians. American and Russian policymakers and experts have commonly spoken of the Asia-Pacific or Asian-Pacific region, respectively. Both groups presuppose that the Pacific Rim cannot even be imagined without the primacy of Asian nations, tacitly agreeing that among them China appears to be a natural leader. The recent and ongoing shift of global wealth toward the Pacific is therefore widely interpreted as a harbinger of the Asian century.
This interpretation, however, does not square with the fact that the Pacific Rim is not Asia-centric in any metric aside from population numbers. If one counts the economic might of all 31 Pacific coastal states using the purchasing-parity method, it turns out that in 2011 $20.7 trillion of GDP, or 46.1 percent of the gross regional product, was generated..
(Excerpt) Read more at the-american-interest.com ...
Interesting read. Thanks for posting!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.