President
Barack Obama’s Asia trip, which has started with a visit to Japan,
will send an unmistakable signal: the United States remains committed to a
region that has become the world’s economic and military center of gravity.
Yet once the afterglow of the visit fades,
U.S. allies and partners in the Asia-Pacific are bound once again to question
American staying power. True, the Obama administration’s signature foreign
policy initiative – the pivot
or rebalance to Asia – has achieved many of its initial objectives.
Countries in the region recognize this. But they are ultimately more focused on
what will come next. And with less than three years of Obama’s presidency
remaining, now is the moment to lay out a vision for U.S. Asia policy through
2016.
Two opposing sets of forces have long
co-existed in Asia. Deepening economic interdependence, a growing constellation
of regional forums, and the spread of democratic values promote peace. At the
same time, rising nationalism, territorial disputes, military buildups, and the
adverse impact of climate change create an undercurrent of instability.
Successive U.S. presidents
have responded to these competing forces by deepening engagement with the
Asia-Pacific region in order to tilt the balance toward peace. For example, the
Clinton administration revitalized the U.S.-Japan alliance, worked to integrate
China into international institutions, and reset relations with India. Under
President George W. Bush, the United States strengthened ties with Japan and
South Korea and inked a landmark nuclear agreement with India. As part of
Obama’s rebalance, the United States has joined key regional forums,
established a new partnership with Indonesia, enhanced its military presence in
Southeast Asia, and launched an ambitious (if unfinished) round of regional
trade talks.
The challenge today in Asia is that the
forces of instability are becoming more prominent while the sources of peace
are waning in influence. The United States must update an Asia-Pacific strategy
devised in 2011 to reflect the geopolitical realities of 2014. And while
President Obama’s trip to Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, and the Philippines
will provide an opportunity to take stock, the next stage will require creating
a network of cooperation that spans U.S. partners and allies in the region and
beyond.
This web of “likeminded” powers would not
contain China, but could shape the context of its rise in ways that deter
conflict and encourage China to embrace the resolution of international
disputes through peaceful negotiation rather than military intimidation or
outright force. The network could also help to integrate transitional countries
such as Myanmar and non-democratic states such as Vietnam. European
participation in the web would link it to a global order rooted in the rule of
law and democratic values.
American leadership will play a critical
role in building this network of cooperation. But what can it do to make all
this a reality?
First, the United States should partner
with Australia and Japan to establish an “Indian Ocean Submarine Center of
Excellence” in Perth. With more submarines deployed in the Indian Ocean, often
by nations with little experience of undersea operations, there is a need to
develop common rules of the road. The school would bring together Indian Ocean
navies that possess or plan to acquire submarines. Beyond reducing the
possibility of future accidents, the center’s activities would advance naval
cooperation among participating nations.
Second, the Obama administration should
launch a dialogue among computer emergency response teams from the United
States, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United
Kingdom. This dialogue would bring together premier cyber response teams from
some of the world’s most information dependent economies. Participating teams
would exchange best practices for maintaining secure networks and share
assessments of online threats.
Third, the United States should encourage
Japan, South Korea, and Australia to initiate a caucus of Indo-Pacific
countries committed to a free and open Internet. The primary target of the
caucus would be emerging democracies in South and Southeast Asia that remain
ambivalent about the future of Internet governance and will command an
increasing share of the world’s online population in the coming decades.
President Obama has arrived in a region
that stands at a crossroads. His initial engagement has succeeded in keeping
the peace. Yet with the forces of instability ascendant in Asia, the current
U.S. approach risks falling short. The Obama administration should seize the
moment and carve out a legacy by doubling down on the Asia rebalance.
By Daniel M. Kliman, Special to CNN
Editor’s note: Daniel
M. Kliman is a senior advisor with the Asia Program of the German
Marshall Fund of the United States (GMF) and a fellow at the Truman National
Security Project.
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