Source: Foreign Policy in Focus
U.S.-Chinese relations are worse than at any time since the renewal or relations began in the early 1970s.Ā As in the late 1940s, we are witnessing, and suffering, the restructuring of the global disorder into a new, extremely dangerous, and totally unnecessary confrontation analogous, but not identical, to the Cold War. As Zhu Zhiqun, my colleague at the Committee for a SANE U.S.-China Policy has written, āthe Biden Administration has convinced itself that China is an existential threat to US national interests andā¦must be pushed back at all costs.ā Trump, and now Biden, Blinken and others, blinded by their self-righteousness, have forged a new Washington and national consensus: China poses an existential threat to freedom and democracy around the world; therefore the U.S. must aggressively defend freedom and democracy ā militarily, diplomatically, technologically, and otherwise.
That the United States has enforced an Asia-Pacific empire since 1898, that human rights do not exist in Guantanamo, that racist Republicans ā like Modi, Washingtonās new partner in India ā are disenfranchising minority voters, and that the United States is deeply allied with repressive governments around the world are inconvenient truths consigned to an Orwellian memory hole.
At root are the inevitable tensions between rising and declining powers, the Thucydides Trap, that many times in history has climaxed in catastrophic wars. Compounding the Cold War analogy, there are disturbing parallels to the years before World War I:Ā tensions between rising and declining powers and complex alliance structures that now include the QUAD,Ā intense nationalism with attendant hatreds, territorial disputes, arms races with new technologies, international economic integration and competition, autocracies, and wild-card actors.
Like the 1914 Sarajevo gunshots, an incident, accident, or miscalculation āa collision of warships in the South or East China Seas or near Taiwan ā could escalate to a major, potentially nuclear, war.
Chinaās economic transformation is the foundation for its aggressive diplomacy and increasingly advanced military. The deepening integration of Asian and Pacific economies with Chinaās, Beijingās aggressive actions in the South China/West Philippine Sea, and its area denial air and cyber capabilities increasingly call into question Washingtonās long-term ability to continue its Indo-Pacific dominance.
Like Obama, and Trump before them, the Biden administration, Congress, and much of the country remain rooted in the self-defeating ideologies of U.S. exceptionalism, Ā manifest destiny, which in turn feeds anti-Asian racism. Meanwhile, Chinaās leaders, marked by the nationās century and a half of humiliations, are in no mood to back down as they seek to fulfill General Secretary Xiās China Dream, restoring China to its leading historic role.
Trump doubled down on the Obama pivot to the Asia-Pacific with his administrationās 2018 National Defense Strategy. The Strategy, which shapes all U.S. military planning, and now NATOās, reduced U.S. military commitments to the Middle East and prioritized planning and preparations for possible great power war.
The Biden administration has since issued its Interim Strategic Guidelines, which are consistent with the Trump strategy. China remains a āstrategic competitor.ā Preparations for possible great power war against China or Russia remain the Pentagonās and the āall governmentā priority.Ā These and the commitments to contain and manage Chinaās rise should come as no surprise with Kurt Campbell, lead author of the Obama era Pivot to Asia and the Pacific doctrine the lead figure making U.S. Indo-Pacific policies in the National Security Council. The administrationās āget toughā approach to China was previewed in the confrontational run up to the March Anchorage mini summit. Ā Juneās NATO summit formalized adoption of the NATO 2030 doctrine, which makes containment of China one of the alliances two priorities. Beginning with the dispatch of an aircraft carrier fleet to the South China/West Philippine Sea within days of Bidenās inauguration, the administration has engaged in provocative military operations, and Bidenās record high military budget spells danger as well as jobs and profits.
One change from the Trump era is the priority Biden gives to reinforcing U.S. military power with alliances. Prime Minister Suga and President Moon were the first foreign heads of state invited by Biden to Washington. Secretaries Blinken and Austin met with their QUAD alliance partners before confronting their Chinese counterparts in Anchorage, and a QUAD summit is scheduled for September. Biden has reaffirmed the U.S. āironcladā commitment to its alliance with South Korea, its military backing to Japanās Senkaku/Diaoyu Island claims, and to the military defense of the Philippine interests in the South China/West Philippine Sea.
Taiwan is the Indo Pacificās most dangerous flashpoint. Neither side wants war, but accidents and miscalculations happen. While U.S. support for the islandās liberal democracy is a major source of tension with authoritarian China, two geostrategic realities lie at the heart of great power tensions over the island. Like Cuba, just 90 miles from Florida where the 1962 introduction of Soviet missiles sparked the Cuban Missile Crisis, Taiwan is 100 miles from the Chinese mainland. It is thus seen as a source of Chinese military vulnerability.Ā Taiwan is also the worldās leading source of advanced semiconductors on which the U.S., Chinese and Japanese economies depend. These make the island a coveted strategic prize.
China has long been clear about its red line in Taiwan. Despite Beijingās repeated preference for peaceful reunification with what it calls its ārenegade province,ā it has long been clear that if Taipei takes irreversible steps toward de jure independence, it will respond militarily.
Biden and Blinken have thus been playing with fire. For the first time since the renewal of U.S.-Chinese relations in 1979, Taiwanās functional ambassador to the United States was invited to Januaryās presidential inauguration. Contrary to Washingtonās five-decades old commitment to a one-China policy and to āstrategic ambiguityā regarding U.S. commitments to defend Taiwan, Blinken and now Austin have trumpeted Washingtonās ārock solidā commitment to Taiwanās defense. This, when polls indicate that increasing the U.S. commitments to defend Taiwan fuels Taiwanese support for independence. This, in turn, pushes the limits toward Chinaās red line.
Biden has repeatedly dispatched warships to the Taiwan Strait, and dispatched a so-called āunofficialā delegation of former top officials to meet with senior Taiwanese leaders. Guidelines that long restricted U.S. diplomats from meeting their Taiwanese counterparts are being revised to encourage such meetings. And discussions are proceeding for the deployment of a permanent U.S. naval presence near Taiwan.
China is no innocent. Ā In addition to Beijingās repression of human rights in Hong Kong, Xinjiang, and elsewhere, its Peopleās Liberation Army welcomed the Biden administration by repeatedly sending warplanes into Taiwanās air space and warships into Taiwanese waters. It interfered with Taiwanās efforts to obtain Covid vaccines, and General Secretary Xi marked the Chinese Communist Partyās centennary by stressing the importance of āpeaceful reunificationā with Taiwan as a principle for Chinaās ānational rejuvenation.ā
The situation is no better in the South China/West Philippine Sea, where even the Pentagon recognizes that Chinaās defining military doctrine is āstrategic defense.āĀ Encircled by hundreds of U.S. military bases and installations and by the U.S. Navyās Seventh Fleet, in total disregard of other nationsā legitimate claims and of international law, China has expanded its South China Sea defense perimeter with its neo-imperial nine-dash line and construction of military bases on disputed rocks and islets. In the imperial tradition of great powers, China is mimicking the U.S. Monroe Doctrine that has long been the foundation of U.S. Western Hemisphere hegemony.
The Seaās 17.7 billion tons of crude oil make it the worldās fourth largest oil reserve. Add to that its massive amounts of natural gas, and other minerals. Of greater strategic importance is the fact that the Sea lies astride sea lanes over which 40 percent of the worldās trade transits, including the fossil fuels that power the Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean economies. Much like the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf throughout the twentieth century, the Sea functions as the jugular vein of the worldās most dynamic capitalist economies. Were the Malacca Strait or its other sea lanes to be blockaded, the regionās economies would face disaster. The Sea is thus this centuryās geostrategic center of the struggle for world power.
Add to all of this the Seaās waves lap against Chinaās most vulnerable frontier ā its coastal economic powerhouse.
To reinforce U.S. regional hegemony, Presidents Obama, Trump, and now Biden have encouraged resistance to Chinaās South China Sea territorial claims and have conducted frequent and provocative āfreedom of navigationā (FONOP) naval and air forays near the disputed islands occupied by China. As a Chinese Maritime think tank reported, in 2020, the U.S. militaryĀ exerted āmaximum pressureā in theĀ South China Seaā with āunprecedentedā Navy and Air Force deployments to the area. U.S. aircraft carriers, destroyers, and their supporting fleets conducted more FONOP forays near Chinaās militarized islets than ever before.
Consistent with its alliance strategy, the Seventh fleet is now being joined by British, French, German, Dutch, and Japanese warships. China, too, has been conducting its naval drills, the most offensive being its deployment of more than 200 ships, ostensibly fishing trawlers, that have blocked access to Whitsun Reef, within the Philippinesā Exclusive Economic Zone.
U.S. and Chinese warships operating aggressively in close and sometimes dangerous proximity to one another are invitations to potentially deadly accidents and miscalculations. Given the stakes of the competition and power of nationalist forces each country, we should not underestimate the danger of an incident unleashing forces that cannot be politically contained.
A new and global Cold War with China or, worse, a hot and potentially nuclear war with China, are the last things that humanity needs. Instead of the U.S., Japanese, NATO, and Chinese military ratcheting up potentially deadly tensions, human survival demands overcoming vested interests and the pursuit of diplomatic solutions to stubborn and impacted disputes.
We cannot establish a nuclear weapons-free world if no one is left to create it . That means organizing to prevent great power nuclear war and the nuclear winter. As we learned from the Palme Commissionās 1982 Common Security report, which provided the paradigm that led to the INF Treaty and ended the U.S.-Soviet Cold War before the collapse of the Berlin Wall, security cannot be achieved via spiraling arms races with a nationās rival. It can only be achieved by creating mutual trust and pursuing mutually beneficial diplomacy. Common security is not peace, or nuclear weapons abolition, but it can prevent catastrophic war and open the way for nuclear disarmament, collaboration to reverse the climate emergency and to address this and future pandemics.
Toward these ends, demands in or organizing should include:
- U.S. adoption of a no first use nuclear war fighting doctrine, renewed U.S.-Chinese military to military consultations to prevent miscalculations, and credible U.S. and Chinese steps toward fulfilling their Article VI NPT obligation.
- Ending all provocative and dangerous military shows of force.
- Honoring the one-China formula and encouraging Chinese-Taiwanese negotiations
- Engage the ASEAN Regional Forum to renew U.S.-Chinese-ASEAN multilateral negotiations, including a binding Southeast Asian Code of Conduct regarding military operations in the South China/West Philippine Sea and for joint development of the seaās mineral resources.
- Nuclear umbrella states signing and ratifying the Treaty on the Prohibition if Nuclear Weapons to put pressure on all the nuclear weapons states.
May we prevail in our collective efforts to prevent nuclear war, ban all nuclear weapons, assist nuclear weapons victims, reverse the climate emergency, and stanch this and future pandemics.
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