A SMALL but notable industry in the United States predicts the "coming war" with China, and Atlantic Magazine is foremost among reputable American monthlies in giving a home to such speculation. It has just done it again, in an article that includes a hearty dose of geopolitical theory. The theory is "The Thucydides Trap".
The author was Harvard University's Graham Allison, who coined that phrase. Thucydides, the historian of the Peloponnesian War in the 5th century BC, explained what caused the war this way: "It was the rise of Athens, and the fear that this inspired in Sparta, that made war inevitable." It lasted 20 years and, at the end of it, the ancient Greek world's two great powers were devastated.
Yet they didn't really go to war over anything in particular, Thucydides said. The problem was that Athens was overtaking Sparta in power (as China is overtaking the US now), and that was enough to send them to war. So are China and the US doomed to go to war in the next decade?
Graham Allison knows better than to make a hard prediction, but he points out that of the past 16 cases when one major power was gaining in power and its rival feared relegation to the second rank, 12 ended in war.
Does it really matter who is more powerful when China and the US have no shared border, make no territorial claims against each other, and are separated by the world's largest ocean? Many in each country would say no, but both countries have military-industrial-academic complexes that thrive on the threat of a US-Chinese military conflict.