China and the U.S. Face an Unprecedented Crisis
If the world is indeed entering a new Cold War, it bears little resemblance to the final years of that global conflict with its frequent summits between smiling leaders and its arms agreements aimed at de-escalating nuclear tensions. Instead, the world today seems more like the perilous first decade of that old Cold War, marked by bloody regional conflicts, threats of nuclear strikes, and the constant risk of superpower confrontation.
While world leaders debate the Ukraine crisis at the United Nations and news flashes from that battle zone become a part of our daily lives, the most dramatic and dangerous changes may be occurring at the other end of Eurasia, from the Indian Ocean to the Western Pacific. There, Beijing and Washington are forming rival coalitions as they maneuver over a possible war focused on the island of Taiwan and for dominance over a vast region thatās home to more than half of humanity.
And yet, despite the obvious dangers of another war, the crises there are little more than a distraction from a far more serious challenge facing humanity. With so many mesmerized by the conflict in Ukraine and the possibility of another over Taiwan, world leaders largely ignore the rising threat of climate change. It seems to matter little that, in recent months, weāve been given unnerving previews of whatās to come. āGeopolitical divides are undermining⦠all forms of international cooperation,ā U.N. Secretary-General António GuterresĀ toldĀ world leaders at the General Assembly last month. āWe cannot go on like this. Trust is crumbling, inequalities are exploding, our planet is burning.ā
To take in the full import of such an undiplomatic warning from the planetās senior diplomat, think of geopolitical conflict and climate change as two storm fronts ā one a fast-moving thunderstorm, the other a slower tropical depression ā whose convergence might well produce a cataclysm of unprecedented destructive power.
The Geopolitics of the Old Cold War
Although the rival power blocs in this new Cold War across Eurasia resemble those of the 1950s, there are subtle differences that make the current balance of power less stable and potentially more prone to armed conflict.
Right after Chinaās communists captured Beijing in October 1949, their leader Mao Zedong forged a close alliance with the boss of the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin, that shook the world. With those two communist states dominating much of the vast Eurasian land mass, the Cold War was suddenly transformed from a regional into a global conflict.
In 1950, when that new communist alliance launched a meat-grinder war against the West on the Korean peninsula, Washington scrambled for a strategy to contain the spread of communist influence beyond an āIron Curtainā stretching 5,000 miles across Eurasia. In January 1951, the National Security Council (NSC) compiled aĀ top secret reportĀ warning that āthe United States is now in a war of survival,ā which it was in danger of losing. Were actual combat to erupt in Europe, the 10 active U.S. army divisions there could be crushed by the Soviet Unionās 175 divisions. So, the NSC recommended that Washington increase its reliance on āstrategic air powerā to deliver its expanding āatomic stockpile.ā In addition, it suggested Washington should match its North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) commitment by building a āposition of strength in the Far East, thus obtaining an active strategic base against Russia in the event of general war with the Soviets.ā
With surprising speed, American diplomats implemented that strategy, signing treaties and mutual-defense pacts meant to encircle Eurasia with rings of steel, especially in the form of new air bases. After transforming the just-formed NATO into an expressly military alliance, Washington quickly negotiated five bilateral defense pacts along the edge of Asia with Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Australia. To bolster that continentās long southern flank, the Western alliance then forged two mutual-defense pacts: METO (the Middle East Treaty Organization) and SEATO (the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization). To complete its 360° encirclement of Eurasia, the U.S. formed NORAD (the North American Aerospace Command) with Canada, deploying a massive armada of missiles, bombers, and early-warning radar to check any future Soviet attacks across the Arctic.
Within a decade, the U.S. had constructed an aerial empire, subsuming the sovereignty of the dozens of allied nations and allowing U.S. Air Force jet fighters to fly their skies as if they were their own. This imperium of the clouds would be tethered to the earth by hundreds of U.S. air bases, home to 580 behemothĀ B-52 bombers,Ā 4,500 jet fighters, and an armada of missiles that, by 1960, allowed the Air Force toĀ claim nearly halfĀ the Pentagonās swelling budget.
Although this defense architecture rested on the threat of thermonuclear war, it introduced a surprising element of geopolitical stability to the superpower confrontation of that era. As a start, it stretched Soviet defenses thin along a 12,000-mile frontier and so, strangely enough, reduced the threat that a single, concentrated point of confrontation could escalate into an atomic war. Indeed, during the 45 years of the Cold War, there would be just four moments when nuclear war threatened, all quickly defused: the Taiwan Straits crisis of 1958, the Berlin crisis of 1961, the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, and the Able Archer NATO exercise of 1983. With the Soviets effectively confined, Washington could inflict a maximum cost at a minimum price whenever its rival tried to break out of its geopolitical isolation, first with moderate success in Cuba and Angola and then with devastating effect in Afghanistan, precipitating the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The U.S. and China Face Off
Some 30 years after that Cold War ended, however, strategic gaps have appeared in Washingtonās encirclement of Eurasia, particularly along the continentās southern flank. Among other things, its strong Cold War era position in the Middle East has weakened considerably. Once subordinated allies have become increasingly independent of Washingtonās writ ā notably, Turkey (forming an āaxis of goodā with Russia and Iran), Egypt (purchasingĀ $2 billion in Russian jet fighters), and even Saudi Arabia (doing majorĀ oil dealsĀ with Moscow). Meanwhile, despite a trillion-dollar, decade-plus U.S. intervention there, Iraq isĀ collapsingĀ into failed-state status, while moving ever closer to Iran.
The most significant gap was, however, opened by Washingtonās chaotic withdrawal from its disastrous 20-year war in Afghanistan, whichĀ criticsĀ quickly branded āBidenās Afghan Blunder.ā Yet that decision was more strategic than it first appeared. China had already beenĀ consolidatingĀ its dominance in Central Asia through multibillion-dollar development deals with nations around Afghanistan, like Pakistan, and even before that collapse in Kabul, geopolitical strangulation had forced the U.S. military to send any air support for its ground forces there on a 2,000-mile round-trip flight from the Persian Gulf. Now, a full year later, with the U.S. military facing serious challenges in both Ukraine and the Taiwan Strait, that once-controversial withdrawal seems almost strategically prescient.
At the western end of Eurasia, President Bidenās calibrated response to Russiaās invasion of Ukraine has not only repaired the damage done to NATO by Donald Trumpās attacks on the alliance but fostered a trans-Atlantic solidarity not seen since the coldest days of the Cold War. Apart from the joint effort to arm and train Ukraineās military, there has been a fundamental, long-term shift in Europeās energy imports with profound geopolitical implications. After the European Union (EU) reacted to Vladimir Putinās invasion by banning imports ofĀ Russian coalĀ andĀ oil, while Moscow cut critical natural gas from its pipelines, the U.S. helped fill the breach byĀ shipping 60%Ā of its swelling natural gas exports to Europe.
To handle those fast-rising imports, the EU is spending countless billions on a crash program to build costlyĀ terminalsĀ for Liquified Natural Gas (LNG). To replace the 118 million tons of natural gas imported from Russia annually before the war, the EU is scrambling to double itsĀ current arrayĀ of two-dozen LNG terminals, while simultaneously negotiating long-termĀ contractsĀ with producers in America, Australia, and Qatar to construct costly liquification plants (like the $25-billionĀ Driftwood projectĀ now underway in Louisiana). With stunning speed, such massive investments at both ends of the energy supply chain are ensuring that Europeās economic ties to Russia will never again be as significant.
At the eastern end of Eurasia, on the other hand, an ongoing dangerous stand-off with China over Taiwan is complicating Washingtonās efforts to rebuild its Cold War strategic bastion in the Pacific. Last October, Chinese President Xi JinpingĀ insistedĀ that the āhistorical task of the complete reunification of the motherland must be fulfilled,ā while, in May, President BidenĀ announcedĀ his intention āto get involved militarily to defend Taiwan.ā During her controversial August visit to that island, House Speaker Nancy PelosiĀ stated, āAmericaās determination to preserve democracy here in Taiwan⦠remains ironclad.ā As Chinaās jetsĀ floodĀ that islandās airspace and American warshipsĀ steamĀ defiantly through the Taiwan Strait, both powers have launched pell-mell naval construction programs. The U.S. Navy isĀ aimingĀ to have at least 321 manned vessels, while China, with the worldās largest shipbuilding capacity,Ā plansĀ a battle force of 425 ships by 2030.
In recent years, China has relentlessly expanded across Asia economically, while building the worldās largestĀ trading bloc, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership. In the future, Beijing may even have the means to slowly draw some of Americaās allies into its sphere of influence. While JapanĀ still seesĀ the U.S. commitment to Taiwan as part of its own defense and South Korea has shed its usual ambiguity to issue aĀ joint statementĀ about āthe importance of preserving peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait,ā other Asian allies likeĀ AustraliaĀ and the Philippines have taken a more ambiguous position.
Should China launch an invasion of Taiwan ā which,Ā warnsĀ that islandās foreign minister, might well happen next year ā the price of involvement for the U.S. could prove prohibitive. In a series ofĀ war game scenariosĀ proposed by a Washington think tank last August, intervention to save Taiwan could cost the U.S. Navy at least 79% of its forces, meaning something like two aircraft carriers, dozens of surface ships, and hundreds of aircraft.
The increasing unreliability of some of Washingtonās allies is amply evident along Eurasiaās southern tier. As part of its ongoing strategic realignment, in 2017 Washington ended its 50-year alliance with Pakistan via a Trump tweetĀ condemningĀ Islamabadās ālies and deceit.ā Following Tokyoās lead, Washington thenĀ forgedĀ aĀ naval-orientedĀ entente called the āQuadā with three other Asia-Pacific democracies ā Australia, India, and Japan.
India is clearly the keystone in this loose alliance by virtue of its strategic position and itsĀ growing navyĀ of 150 warships, including nuclear submarines and an aircraft carrier now under construction. Yet New Delhiās ad hoc alliance with those kindred democracies is proving ambiguous at best. It has indeed hosted most of the Quadās annual joint naval maneuvers aimed at checking China in the Indian Ocean. However, it has also joined the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a key instrument for advancing Beijingās Eurasian ambitions. Indeed, it was at that organizationās meeting in Uzbekistan last month that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi publiclyĀ rebukedĀ Vladimir Putin over his Ukraine invasion.
Countering the American array of alliances, China is ā through itsĀ navalĀ expansion and economic development initiatives ā challenging Washingtonās once-dominant position in the Indian Ocean and Western Pacific. Through its trillion-dollar infrastructure investments, Beijing is laying a steel grid of rails, roads, and pipelines across the breadth of Eurasia, matched by a string of 40 commercial ports itās built or bought that now ring the coasts of Africa and Europe.
Already possessing the worldās largest (if not most powerful) navy, Beijingās busy dockyards are constantly launching new warships and nuclear submarines. It also recently built its first major aircraft carrier. Moreover, it already has the second largest space network with more than 500 orbital satellites, while achieving aĀ breakthroughĀ in quantum cryptography byĀ sendingĀ unhackable āentangled photonā messages more than 1,200 kilometers.
Reflecting its sharpening technological edge,Ā according toĀ the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, China has developed sophisticated cyber and anti-satellite tactics to ācounter a U.S. intervention during a regional military conflict.ā And in July 2021, it conducted the worldās first āfractional orbital launchā of aĀ hypersonic missileĀ that circled the globe at an unstoppable speed of 3,800 miles per hour beforeĀ strikingĀ within 24 miles of its target ā ample accuracy for the nuclear payload it could someday carry. In short, the only certainty in any future U.S.-China conflict over Taiwan would be unparalleled destruction as well as an unimaginable disruption of the global economy that would make the fighting in Ukraine seem like a border skirmish.
Environmental Cataclysm
And yet, stunningly enough, thatās not the worst news for Asia or the rest of the planet. The fast-building climate crisis poses a far greater threat. Last February, when the U.N.ās Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released its latest report, Secretary-General António GuterresĀ calledĀ it āa damning indictment of failed climate leadership.ā
In just a decade or two, when global warming reaches 1.5° Celsius, storms and drought will ravage farmlands in even more devastating ways than at present, while reefs that protect coasts will decline by up to 90%, and the population exposed to coastal flooding will increase by at least 20%. The cumulative changes are, in fact, mounting so rapidly, the U.N. warned, that they could soon overwhelm the capacity of humanity and nature to adapt, potentially yielding a planet that might, sooner or later, prove relatively uninhabitable.
In the six months following the release of that doomsday report, weather disasters erupting in Asia would give frightening weight to those dire words. In Pakistan, annual monsoon rains,Ā turbochargedĀ by warming seas, unleashed unprecedentedĀ floodsĀ that covered an unparalleled one-third of the country,Ā displacingĀ 33 million people andĀ killingĀ 1,700. Those watersĀ ravagingĀ its agricultural heartland are not even expected to fully recede for another six months.
While Pakistan is drowning, neighboring Afghanistan is suffering a prolongedĀ droughtĀ that has brought six million people to the brink of famine, while scorching the countryās eastern provinces with wildfires. Similarly, in India,Ā temperaturesĀ this summer averaged 109° to 115° Fahrenheit in 15 provinces andĀ remainedĀ at that intolerable levelĀ in some citiesĀ for a record 27 days.
This summer, China similarly experienced staggering weather extremes, as the countryās worst recordedĀ droughtĀ turned stretches of the great Yangtze River into mudflats, hydropower failures shuttered factories, and temperatures hit record highs. In other parts of the country, however, heavy floods unleashed lethal landslides and rivers ran so high that they changed course. By 2050, the north China plain, now home to 400 million people, is expected to experience killerĀ heatwavesĀ and, by centuryās end, could sufferĀ weather extremesĀ that would make it uninhabitable.
With world leaders now absorbed in military rivalries at both ends of Eurasia, once-promising international cooperation over climate change has virtually ceased. Only recently, in fact, China āsuspendedā all climate talks with the U.S. even though, as of 2020, those two powers were responsible forĀ 44%Ā of the worldās total carbon emissions.
Last November, just four months before the Ukraine war started, the two countries issued an historicĀ declarationĀ at the U.N.ās Glasgow Climate Change Conference recognizing the āurgency of the climate crisisā and stating that they were ācommitted to tackling it through their respective accelerated actions in the critical decade of the 2020sā¦to avoid catastrophic impacts.ā To honor that commitment, China agreed to āphase downā (but not āphase outā) its reliance on coal starting in 2025, just as the U.S. promised āto reach 100% carbon pollution-free electricity by 2035ā³ ā neither exactly a dream response to the crisis. Now, withĀ no climate communicationĀ at all, things look grim indeed.
Not surprisingly, the collision of those geopoliticalĀ andĀ environmental tempests represents a mindboggling threat to the planetās future, giving the very idea of a cold war turning into a hot war new meaning. Even if Beijing and Washington were to somehow avert armed conflict over Taiwan, the chill in their diplomatic relations is crippling the worldās already weak capacity to meet the challenge of climate change. Instead of the āwin-winā that was the basis for effective U.S.-China relations for nearly 30 years, the world is faced with circumstances that can only be called ālose-loseā ā or worse.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate
